 John David Levy, thank you very much for being with WPC TV. You are with the Brookings Institution in Washington DC, but I think you're best known as former French ambassador to the United Nations. You mentioned a new sort of Monroe Doctrine by Russia and China. What do you mean by that? Well, we have built, after the Second World War, a system based on international law, the UN Charter, the Peaceful Settlement of the Peaceful Settlement of Disputes and so on. And cooperation. Cooperation means to work together to find solutions to regional disputes. That's what we do. But it seems to me, maybe I'm wrong, but it seems to me that two countries, China in Asia, Russia in Europe, would like to see the U.S. and others out and would like to see their role recognized as kind of paramount to solve the problems of the region. Of course, you heard the Chinese ambassador, Wu Jianmin, say, no, no, not at all. We want to cooperate. So it's a debate. I think it's fair to say that there is, it seems to me, the temptation for China to be recognized as a kind of prominent actor in the region. And the fact is that China has emerged as a giant in East Asia. It's a fact that there is a kind of regional integration around China. And it's a fact that there are problems. And for these tiny island problems, China doesn't want to see outsiders interfere. So in a way, just as the Monroe Doctrine worked for the United States with the Western Hemisphere, the Americas, could it be inevitable for China with a sphere of instruments, it's their backyard with the Pacific Ocean, the South China Sea? Well, that's my impression, maybe I'm wrong, but I think that, yes, China doesn't want to see the U.S. interfering in these disputes. They consider that it should be left to the regional actors, that is, for the Senkaku Tiaoyu, to Japan and China, for South China Sea, to the Philippines or Vietnam and China without U.S. And pivot to Asia by the United States. And certainly pivot to Asia is not, it seems to me, an idea which is well received and welcomed in Beijing. Of course, if you look at Russia, it seems to me that it's even more true that Russia wants to rebuild its paramount role in what was once the Soviet Empire and before the Russian Empire. And what we have seen in Georgia, what we see today in Ukraine, is an illustration of this dream of rebuilding the greatness of the Russian people and, in a way, the Russian Empire as it was. And of course, the U.S. is not welcomed as an actor in this region. So that's what I wanted to say by using this image of the new Monroe Doctrine of the 21st century. Jean-David Levit, thank you very much indeed. Thank you very much.