¶ He said it was dependent upon Washington to repair relations with the Arab world and to renew the organization together with Egypt, long a foundation of territorial soundness.
¶ If Washington is requesting that Egypt respect its settlement with Israel, he said, Washington ought to likewise experience its own particular Camp David duty to Palestinian self-principle. He said the United States must regard the Arab world's history and society, notwithstanding when that contentions with Western qualities.
¶ And he rejected feedback from the White House that he didn't move sufficiently quick to censure dissenters who as of late moved over the United States Embassy divider and smoldered the American banner in displeasure regarding a video that ridiculed the Prophet Muhammad.
¶ "We took as much time as necessary" in reacting to keep away from a hazardous kickback, he said, yet then managed "unequivocally" with the little, vicious component among the demonstrators.
¶ "We can never overlook this sort of brutality, yet we have to manage the circumstance shrewdly," he said, noticing that the international safe haven workers were never in peril.
¶ Mr. Morsi, who will go to New York on Sunday for a meeting of the United Nations General Assembly, lands at a fragile minute. He confronts political weight at home to demonstrate his autonomy, however requests from the West for consolation that Egypt under Islamist principle will remain a steady accomplice.
¶ Mr. Morsi, 61, whose office was still decorated with nautical artworks that Mr. Mubarak deserted, said the United States ought not anticipate that Egypt will live by its tenets.
¶ "In the event that you need to judge the execution of the Egyptian individuals by the norms of German or Chinese or American society, then there is no space for judgment," he said. "At the point when the Egyptians choose something, most likely it is not proper for the U.S. At the point when the Americans choose something, this, obviously, is not fitting for Egypt."
¶ He proposed that Egypt would not be antagonistic toward the West, but rather would not be as agreeable as Mr. Mubarak either.
¶ "Progressive American organizations basically obtained with American citizen cash the abhorrence, if not the disdain, of the people groups of the district," he said, by sponsorship authoritarian governments over prevalent resistance and supporting Israel over the Palestinians.
¶ He at first looked to meet with President Obama at the White House amid his visit this week, however he got a cool gathering, assistants to both presidents said. Aware of the confused decision year governmental issues of a visit with Egypt's Islamist pioneer, Mr. Morsi dropped his solicitation.
¶ His hush in the prompt repercussions of the international safe haven challenge evoked a strained phone call from Mr. Obama, who additionally told a TV questioner that right then and there he didn't think about Egypt as an associate, if not a foe either. Whenever inquired as to whether he considered the United States a partner, Mr. Morsi replied in English, "That relies on upon your meaning of associate," grinning at his intentional reverberation of Mr. Obama. Be that as it may, he said he imagined the two countries as "genuine companions."
¶ Mr. Morsi talked in a resplendent castle that Mr. Mubarak initiated three decades back, a world far from the Nile Delta ranch where the new president grew up, or the jail cells where he had been restricted by Mr. Mubarak for his part in the Brotherhood. Three months after his swearing-in, the most recognizable change to the presidential office was a plaque around his work area bearing the Koranic caution, "Be aware of a day on which you will come back to God."
¶ A stocky figure with a trim whiskers and wire-edge glasses, he earned a doctorate in materials science at the University of Southern California in the mid 1980s. He talked with a simple trust in his new power, delighting in an endorsement rating he said was at 70 percent. When he developed enlivened, he slipped from Arabic into fresh English.
¶ Little known at home or abroad until only a couple of months prior, he was the Brotherhood's second decision as a presidential candidate after the main decision was precluded. On the night of the race, the commanders who had ruled since Mr. Mubarak's ouster issued a pronouncement keeping most presidential forces for themselves.
¶ But a month ago Mr. Morsi frustrated all desires by prying full official power once again from the commanders. In the meeting, when a translator recommended that the officers had "chose" to leave legislative issues, Mr. Morsi immediately redressed him.
¶ "No, no, it is not that they "chose" to do it," he interposed in English, resolved to clear up that it was he who evacuated them. "This is the will of the Egyptian individuals through the chose president, correct?
¶ "The president of the Arab Republic of Egypt is the officer of the military, full stop. Egypt now is a genuine common state. It is not religious, it is not military. It is law based, free, protected, legal and present day."
¶ He included, "We are carrying on as indicated by the Egyptian individuals' decision and will, nothing else — is it clear?"
¶ He commended Mr. Obama for moving "conclusively and rapidly" to bolster the Arab Spring unrests, and he said he trusted that Americans upheld "the privilege of the general population of the area to appreciate the same flexibilities that Americans have."
¶ Arabs and Americans have "a common goal, each to live free in their own particular area, as indicated by their traditions and qualities, in a reasonable and just design," he said, including that he sought after "an amicable, tranquil conjunction."
¶ But he additionally contended that Americans "have an uncommon obligation" for the Palestinians in light of the fact that the United States had marked the 1978 Camp David accord. The assention required the withdrawal of Israeli troops from the West Bank and Gaza and for full Palestinian self-principle.
¶ "the length of peace and equity are not satisfied for the Palestinians, then the bargain stays unfulfilled," he said.
¶ He made no statements of regret for his roots in the Brotherhood, the isolated religious recovery assemble that was Mr. Mubarak's primary restriction and now commands Egyptian legislative issues.
¶ "I grew up with the Muslim Brotherhood," he said. "I took in my standards in the Muslim Brotherhood. I figured out how to love my nation with the Muslim Brotherhood. I learned governmental issues with the Brotherhood. I was a pioneer of the Muslim Brotherhood."
¶ He cleared out the gathering when he took office however remains an individual from its political gathering. However, he said he sees "truly no contention" between his dedication to the Brotherhood and his promises to represent for the benefit of all, including individuals from the Christian minority or those with more mainstream perspectives.
¶ "I demonstrate my freedom by taking the right represents my nation," he said. "In the event that I see something great from the Muslim Brotherhood, I will take it. On the off chance that I see something better in the Wafd" — Egypt's most seasoned liberal gathering — "I will take it."
¶ He over and again pledged to maintain rise to citizenship privileges of all Egyptians, paying little heed to religion, sex or class. Yet, he remained by the religious contentions he once made as a Brotherhood pioneer that neither a lady nor a Christian would be a reasonable president.
¶ "We are discussing values, convictions, societies, history, reality," he said. He said the Islamic position on presidential qualification was a matter for Muslim researchers to choose, not him. Be that as it may, paying little heed to his own perspectives or the Brotherhood's, he said, common law was another matter.
¶ "I won't keep a lady from being assigned as a possibility for the presidential crusade," he said. "This is not in the Constitution. This is not in the law. In any case, on the off chance that you need to approach me on the off chance that I will vote in favor of her or not, that is something else, that is distinctive."
¶ He was additionally avid to think back about his essence of American society as a graduate understudy at the University of Southern California. "Go, Trojans!" he said, and he found out about the world from Barbara Walters in the morning and Walter Cronkite around evening time. "What's more, that is how it is!" Mr. Morsi said with a grin.
¶ But he additionally showed some inner conflict. He emitted about his deference for American work propensities, promptness and time administration. Yet, when a mediator said that Mr. Morsi had "took in a great deal" in the United States, he immediately contributed a qualifier in English: "Logically!"
¶ He was agitated by the posses and road of viciousness of Los Angeles, he said, and disheartened by the West's looser sexual mores, saying couples living respectively out of wedlock and what he called "exposed eateries," like Hooters.
¶ "I don't respect that," he said. "In any case, that is the general public. They are experiencing their direction."
¶
¶This article has been changed to mirror the accompanying adjustment:
¶Correction: September 24, 2012
¶An prior adaptation of this article conveyed an adjustment that was posted in mistake. It has been evacuated for further research.
¶
¶This article has been modified to mirror the accompanying adjustment:
¶Correction: September 26, 2012
¶An article on Sunday around a call by Egypt's new Islamist president, Mohamed Morsi, for the United States to indicate more noteworthy admiration for Arab culture and values alluded not entirely to the 1978 Camp David accord in a few versions. As the article noticed, the agreement required an Israeli withdrawal from involved region to clear a path for Palestinian self-sufficiency. It likewise ought to have brought up that an Israeli withdrawal would come after Palestinians stepped toward self-decide that were not actualized as the understanding had imagined.
¶ If Washington is requesting that Egypt respect its settlement with Israel, he said, Washington ought to likewise experience its own particular Camp David duty to Palestinian self-principle. He said the United States must regard the Arab world's history and society, notwithstanding when that contentions with Western qualities.
¶ And he rejected feedback from the White House that he didn't move sufficiently quick to censure dissenters who as of late moved over the United States Embassy divider and smoldered the American banner in displeasure regarding a video that ridiculed the Prophet Muhammad.
¶ "We took as much time as necessary" in reacting to keep away from a hazardous kickback, he said, yet then managed "unequivocally" with the little, vicious component among the demonstrators.
¶ "We can never overlook this sort of brutality, yet we have to manage the circumstance shrewdly," he said, noticing that the international safe haven workers were never in peril.
¶ Mr. Morsi, who will go to New York on Sunday for a meeting of the United Nations General Assembly, lands at a fragile minute. He confronts political weight at home to demonstrate his autonomy, however requests from the West for consolation that Egypt under Islamist principle will remain a steady accomplice.
¶ Mr. Morsi, 61, whose office was still decorated with nautical artworks that Mr. Mubarak deserted, said the United States ought not anticipate that Egypt will live by its tenets.
¶ "In the event that you need to judge the execution of the Egyptian individuals by the norms of German or Chinese or American society, then there is no space for judgment," he said. "At the point when the Egyptians choose something, most likely it is not proper for the U.S. At the point when the Americans choose something, this, obviously, is not fitting for Egypt."
¶ He proposed that Egypt would not be antagonistic toward the West, but rather would not be as agreeable as Mr. Mubarak either.
¶ "Progressive American organizations basically obtained with American citizen cash the abhorrence, if not the disdain, of the people groups of the district," he said, by sponsorship authoritarian governments over prevalent resistance and supporting Israel over the Palestinians.
¶ He at first looked to meet with President Obama at the White House amid his visit this week, however he got a cool gathering, assistants to both presidents said. Aware of the confused decision year governmental issues of a visit with Egypt's Islamist pioneer, Mr. Morsi dropped his solicitation.
¶ His hush in the prompt repercussions of the international safe haven challenge evoked a strained phone call from Mr. Obama, who additionally told a TV questioner that right then and there he didn't think about Egypt as an associate, if not a foe either. Whenever inquired as to whether he considered the United States a partner, Mr. Morsi replied in English, "That relies on upon your meaning of associate," grinning at his intentional reverberation of Mr. Obama. Be that as it may, he said he imagined the two countries as "genuine companions."
¶ Mr. Morsi talked in a resplendent castle that Mr. Mubarak initiated three decades back, a world far from the Nile Delta ranch where the new president grew up, or the jail cells where he had been restricted by Mr. Mubarak for his part in the Brotherhood. Three months after his swearing-in, the most recognizable change to the presidential office was a plaque around his work area bearing the Koranic caution, "Be aware of a day on which you will come back to God."
¶ A stocky figure with a trim whiskers and wire-edge glasses, he earned a doctorate in materials science at the University of Southern California in the mid 1980s. He talked with a simple trust in his new power, delighting in an endorsement rating he said was at 70 percent. When he developed enlivened, he slipped from Arabic into fresh English.
¶ Little known at home or abroad until only a couple of months prior, he was the Brotherhood's second decision as a presidential candidate after the main decision was precluded. On the night of the race, the commanders who had ruled since Mr. Mubarak's ouster issued a pronouncement keeping most presidential forces for themselves.
¶ But a month ago Mr. Morsi frustrated all desires by prying full official power once again from the commanders. In the meeting, when a translator recommended that the officers had "chose" to leave legislative issues, Mr. Morsi immediately redressed him.
¶ "No, no, it is not that they "chose" to do it," he interposed in English, resolved to clear up that it was he who evacuated them. "This is the will of the Egyptian individuals through the chose president, correct?
¶ "The president of the Arab Republic of Egypt is the officer of the military, full stop. Egypt now is a genuine common state. It is not religious, it is not military. It is law based, free, protected, legal and present day."
¶ He included, "We are carrying on as indicated by the Egyptian individuals' decision and will, nothing else — is it clear?"
¶ He commended Mr. Obama for moving "conclusively and rapidly" to bolster the Arab Spring unrests, and he said he trusted that Americans upheld "the privilege of the general population of the area to appreciate the same flexibilities that Americans have."
¶ Arabs and Americans have "a common goal, each to live free in their own particular area, as indicated by their traditions and qualities, in a reasonable and just design," he said, including that he sought after "an amicable, tranquil conjunction."
¶ But he additionally contended that Americans "have an uncommon obligation" for the Palestinians in light of the fact that the United States had marked the 1978 Camp David accord. The assention required the withdrawal of Israeli troops from the West Bank and Gaza and for full Palestinian self-principle.
¶ "the length of peace and equity are not satisfied for the Palestinians, then the bargain stays unfulfilled," he said.
¶ He made no statements of regret for his roots in the Brotherhood, the isolated religious recovery assemble that was Mr. Mubarak's primary restriction and now commands Egyptian legislative issues.
¶ "I grew up with the Muslim Brotherhood," he said. "I took in my standards in the Muslim Brotherhood. I figured out how to love my nation with the Muslim Brotherhood. I learned governmental issues with the Brotherhood. I was a pioneer of the Muslim Brotherhood."
¶ He cleared out the gathering when he took office however remains an individual from its political gathering. However, he said he sees "truly no contention" between his dedication to the Brotherhood and his promises to represent for the benefit of all, including individuals from the Christian minority or those with more mainstream perspectives.
¶ "I demonstrate my freedom by taking the right represents my nation," he said. "In the event that I see something great from the Muslim Brotherhood, I will take it. On the off chance that I see something better in the Wafd" — Egypt's most seasoned liberal gathering — "I will take it."
¶ He over and again pledged to maintain rise to citizenship privileges of all Egyptians, paying little heed to religion, sex or class. Yet, he remained by the religious contentions he once made as a Brotherhood pioneer that neither a lady nor a Christian would be a reasonable president.
¶ "We are discussing values, convictions, societies, history, reality," he said. He said the Islamic position on presidential qualification was a matter for Muslim researchers to choose, not him. Be that as it may, paying little heed to his own perspectives or the Brotherhood's, he said, common law was another matter.
¶ "I won't keep a lady from being assigned as a possibility for the presidential crusade," he said. "This is not in the Constitution. This is not in the law. In any case, on the off chance that you need to approach me on the off chance that I will vote in favor of her or not, that is something else, that is distinctive."
¶ He was additionally avid to think back about his essence of American society as a graduate understudy at the University of Southern California. "Go, Trojans!" he said, and he found out about the world from Barbara Walters in the morning and Walter Cronkite around evening time. "What's more, that is how it is!" Mr. Morsi said with a grin.
¶ But he additionally showed some inner conflict. He emitted about his deference for American work propensities, promptness and time administration. Yet, when a mediator said that Mr. Morsi had "took in a great deal" in the United States, he immediately contributed a qualifier in English: "Logically!"
¶ He was agitated by the posses and road of viciousness of Los Angeles, he said, and disheartened by the West's looser sexual mores, saying couples living respectively out of wedlock and what he called "exposed eateries," like Hooters.
¶ "I don't respect that," he said. "In any case, that is the general public. They are experiencing their direction."
¶
¶This article has been changed to mirror the accompanying adjustment:
¶Correction: September 24, 2012
¶An prior adaptation of this article conveyed an adjustment that was posted in mistake. It has been evacuated for further research.
¶
¶This article has been modified to mirror the accompanying adjustment:
¶Correction: September 26, 2012
¶An article on Sunday around a call by Egypt's new Islamist president, Mohamed Morsi, for the United States to indicate more noteworthy admiration for Arab culture and values alluded not entirely to the 1978 Camp David accord in a few versions. As the article noticed, the agreement required an Israeli withdrawal from involved region to clear a path for Palestinian self-sufficiency. It likewise ought to have brought up that an Israeli withdrawal would come after Palestinians stepped toward self-decide that were not actualized as the understanding had imagined.