 Igor Ilyans, thank you. You're from Russia, a very prominent economist and expectator on the political scene. You talked in an earlier session about Russia needing to find its soul. You talked about its European soul and its Asian soul. What did you mean? Isn't there just a Russian soul? No, there is no Russian soul. Our national emblem is a double-headed eagle. One looks east, one looks west. And this duality is always felt. At the moment we are regarded as Europeans by Asians, 100%, ask anybody on the podium of this conference. But at the same time we feel humiliated and offended by our European friends wrongly or rightly after the Ukrainian crisis being pushed out of the family and prodigal kind of a complex. We have to figure out what we want to do. Ideal is to be friendly with both. Ideal to be Europeans as we are, genetically, but very friendly and cooperative with the Asians because two-thirds of our territory is in Asia. But that's ideal. The harsh reality is different at the moment. Do you think the harsh reality in terms of Europe and Ukraine will change because of Russia's new role in Syria? Yeah, but you get one problem substituting for another problem. And there is no trade-offs. We are better in Syria with the West than they will forgive us in the East. That doesn't happen. So you have to solve both problems by cutting ourselves to size internally, not externally, and doing something very tangible and creative for the world security first in the Middle East and then in Europe. In talking about world security, I mean, does the World Policy Conference have a role to play in this? Einstein said that the most serious force is the force of intellect. And WPC is the force of intellect embodied by the leader, by the chairman Therese de Montbriel is somebody of the world caliber and he knows how to find people. And if you find people and you put intellect in one place, that produces a result which cannot be ignored. Thank you so much.