It's in English? It's available.
It's interesting, because he plays with German history, not only because Chancellor Merkel has said very clearly that we won't accept that what the state president of Iran is asserting, in the sense of wiping Israel from the map, is only a saying. In the 1930s a lot of people had not read what Hitler had written, so we won't have a second time the experience that we did not know what the other wanted to say.
That's very harsh, but I think it was necessary to make clear that we take this seriously. And the key is the U.S. position, because the Europeans alone are not able to settle the conflict.
So we hope that there is a diplomatic approach, as we do not exclude anything that we know the options could deliver. I see that there is a necessity to do everything we can to have a diplomatic solution of the issue. We take this as an offer, not only as a letter--what we have heard now. But the next steps are not very sure.
By the way, Mr. Ahmadinejad plays with Germany in another way. He does not declare whether he will, as the state president, attend the soccer game between Iran and Mexico. They are in the championships. The first game will be in Nuremberg next week.
He has to do a lot in Tehran, and he should work at cooling down those who want to have the nuclear option used in Iran.