"The most deserving symbol of international peace was the self-sacrificing general, who fought terrorism and the most violent criminals for two decades, and guaranteed the region and the world's security," Hossein Amir-Abdollahian wrote in a message on X on Friday.
He was referring to Iran's top anti-terror commander, Lieutenant General Qassem Soleimani.
For several years starting in 2014, General Soleimani led the Islamic Republic's military advisory assistance to Iraq and Syria as the Arab countries were grappling with an unbridled terror campaign unleashed by the Takfiri Daesh outfit.
The assistance helped the countries defeat Daesh in 2017, ending the group's ambitions for spreading its campaign of bloodshed and destruction to the entire region and far beyond. The general was, however, assassinated in a United States' drone strike near the Baghdad International Airport in early 2020.
Amir-Abdollahian said monumental attendance at his funeral by tens of millions of people across Iran and Iraq, and the international sympathy that followed his martyrdom "amounted to the most splendid and lasting #peace_prize in history."
Earlier on Friday, the Norwegian committee awarded the Iranian woman, Narges Mohammadi, with the 2023 Nobel Peace Prize.
Mohammadi has been in and out of jail for much of her adult life and is currently serving a prison term at Tehran's Evin prison.
In 2016, an Iranian appeals court confirmed a 16-year sentence for Mohammadi on charges of colluding to act against national security, engaging in propaganda campaigns against the government as well as forming and directing an illegal group.
She was released in 2020 but was sent back to prison in 2021 on charges that included spreading propaganda against Iran's Islamic establishment.
The Norwegian committee, however, claimed that she had been fighting "against the oppression of women" in Iran and fighting to "promote human rights and freedom for all."
Entitlement of the prize to Mohammadi was well received by the anti-Iran terrorist Mujahedin-e-Khalq Organization (MKO) cult, which is responsible for killing around 17,000 Iranian civilians and officials in violent attacks since the 1979 victory of Iran's Islamic Revolution.
The Israeli regime's Intelligence Minister Gila Gamliel also welcomed the development in a Persian-language post on X, saying he had been "pleased" with her winning the prize, and adding, "We are victorious together..."
MNA/PressTV