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© Foreign Policy/Turtle BayIran's envoy to UN atomic agency borrows the Israelis' chair.
Iran and Israel may seize every public opportunity to stoke hostility between their two rival nations. But sometimes, like everybody, their envoys apparently get distracted from the whole arch-foe, kabuki body language such diplomatic hostilities mandate.

Witness that Iran's diplomatic delegation somehow managed to park itself at the Israel's seating area at a meeting of the International Atomic Energy Agency last week, as originally reported by Foreign Policy's Turtle Bay blogger Colum Lynch.

In the photo provided to Lynch, Iran's envoy to the UN atomic watchdog agency, Dr. Ali Asghar Soltanieh seems simply to be too absorbed by the diplomatic business at hand to notice the symbolic--if no doubt inadvertent--diplomatic seat-swap with the Israeli delegation on the conference floor. (That's Soltanieh, bearded in the white shirt, sitting at the Israeli delegate's seat, flanked by two standing Iranian aides, talking with his Cuban and Irish counterparts.)

"It's hard to imagine how the top Iranian diplomat, after serving more than six years as Tehran's envoy to the atomic agency, wound up in the Israeli seat without an alarm bell going off in his head," Lynch mused. "You'd think there was a protocol office within the Iranian foreign mission responsible for avoiding such a diplomatic faux pas.

Or perhaps the more likely explanation came via Foreign Policy editor David Kenner in a tweet: Sometimes you just really need a place to sit down.