 Here's what's interesting. This is why I have to salute my friends from the UPU. They did a fantastic job. What Bashir did was convene a group of I think about 30 something countries on Sunday and Monday of this week, including my good friend here, Ambassador Shea, who was in every single meeting, every single minute. And the beauty of that process, the goal of that process was to get to what we got to today. But we didn't get to that. We almost got to that. But what the process was able to do through Bashir's leadership and the participation of folks like Ambassador Shea was to identify what we disagreed on and what the boundaries of that were. And that was the beauty of that process. And so once you knew what you agreed on, what you disagreed on, and what the range of disagreement was, then you could be within the box of consensus. And so through the efforts of the UPU leadership working with many of the countries that had to come into that majority coalition, they arrived at the result today. And if you noticed what happened today, this section was supposed to start at 9 a.m., right? But no, no, no, no. They wanted more time to work to this. There were technical issues with writing the actual documents, which they did beautifully. There were the politics of talking to the competing parties and bringing them on board. And I think that the realization is that in a large organization such as this or in a large organization such as my Congress, it's very difficult to do a trade agreement, which is effectively what this is, by many, many amendments. You're better off if you can. We have in our Congress what's called fast-track legislations, like you voted up or down. We want our Congress, by the way, to do that with the U.S.-Mexico-Canada agreement tomorrow, but at least within 38th. But in this case, the brilliance of the leadership here was, okay, here we are. We're in the box. This is what we think the market can bear. From the technical and political standpoint, they worked it, so by the time three o'clock, we're over on the room, they had disseminated the appropriate information and gotten buy-in from people. And I stress, look, this was not three-hour day. This was hard work. These gentlemen and our people and many other people were up till three in the morning last night and they ended up at seven this morning and they did it. So I think it's useful to understand how that worked. I mean, this is a beautiful thing. This is how processes should work when they work well. And we were sufficiently close and the fact that the U.S. was going to leave the U.P.U. I think played this. President Trump was in the room.