 You have the first task, and I'm serious that even though you are a charming young lady, nonetheless, if you go over six or seven minutes, I'm going to be firm and say, no, you've got to stop. Thank you. Thank you. You know, they call me the general because I'm very firm. Also, I have a mission impossible, they call it, how to wake up those whom they just came from lunch. Well, I look at it on general, on the Middle East, that the geopolitical and economic characteristic in the Middle East during the ongoing decade 2021-2030 are likely to be significantly governed by the following realities. First, the post-COVID scenarios and its economic and security fallouts. Second, the dynamics arising from U.S. declining presence and involvement in the Middle East, leading to questions over the possible emergence of collective security structure in the Gulf region and beyond. The regional security arrangements and the geopolitical and economic competition in the East Mediterranean, the Red Sea, and the Arabian Sea would also be critical factors. The third is the preparing for the post-oil era includes prioritizing the agenda of combating climate change challenges. It will also raise a question related to the shifts in the social contract in the Gulf countries and the post-oil rentier policies. Also, aligned to this reality are the requirements imposed by these policies to manage the public sphere. A question about linking entitlement for citizens which achievement and productivity and the subsequent changes in the war culture and conditions. Fourth, the extent of the growing scene of American trade and geopolitical competitions impact on the Middle East and the regional countries. Response to the new Cold War would also be important development. Moreover, are we going to witness a multi-lateral international order and severe international polarization? If yes, would they foil attempts by US allies in the Gulf, the Arab region, and other countries in the region to establish some balance? Such a policy would diversify current strategic options in trade with China or Russia. This raises the question whether the Middle East would witness post-Washington allies attempt to strike a relative balance between the US and other great powers. Also, considering the decline of political Islam in Morocco, Tunisia, Sudan, Jordan, and other countries, this decade or at least part of it would become the post-political Islam phase. However, no strong indications suggest that Middle East countries and societies are prepared to overcome the identity crisis. Hence, the entanglement of security, economy, and politics with history, religion identity questions are highly likely to continue and build societal agreement on the law system and the management of public sphere and the system of rights and freedom. All this is linked to a single question. Will Middle Eastern countries become more stable or prone to conflict? Have lessons been learned from the past two decades? If the decline of political Islam continues, what domestic alternatives will replace it? Would these alternatives be able to tackle the multiple-structure problem in running public affairs in the region? These are the questions. How many minutes I have? You've got another two. Two? Okay. You could stop now if you want to. It's up to you. It's okay. I will stop here and I will... Sure, Akid? Okay. It's okay. But you saved my two minutes later. Okay, exactly. Perfect. And actually, I'm very pleased that first of all the post-political Islam ideas are very, very interesting because we heard, I think, in the Afghanistan panel before lunch that Al Qaeda and Islamic State are by no means dead and could be reviving. But as you say, what is happening in Morocco is actually very encouraging. And you also mentioned the post-oil, which reminds me of that famous saying by Prime Minister Perif Afonso in 1975. He was a Venezuelan oil minister and he said, I call petroleum the devil's excrement, a very colorful phrase, but of course has quite a lot of force because if you think of outsiders' influence and interventions in the Arab world and in Iran, an awful lot of it has been because of oil and gas and the struggle to control them. So the past has been quite complicated, but we are perhaps moving towards a past oil era. A long time I wrote an article that said, is oil a bless or a curse on the GCC? Exactly.