 Let me turn to here once more. What role moving forward now we have more or less established the status quo about what is going on in Afghanistan and what the current situation is. I think the more important question is how it will evolve. What can we expect? What role do you foresee if any of your country? What role does the UAE have to play? What role can the region play in what the future holds for Afghanistan? I know it's a it's a very tricky tricky role there. I think Ali first of all we need to respect the will of the Afghanis. That's a major issue. I mean my colleagues here they mentioned interventions. We had two major interventions clear but there are other interventions you know from unfortunately neighboring countries. So we need to respect the will of the Afghanis. The other issue for us as one of the in the session 13 mentioned that we need to look forward. Stop looking back to the history really. We need to build on what we have now. Now we have a regime either we accept it or not in Afghanistan. So we need to assist that regime to and call him to let all the different ethnic groups different parties to participate in that government. I mean my friend from India just mentioned that the Taliban is a bastoon. Yes it's a bastoon but also we need to make sure that the other minorities the Hazara, the Tajiks, you know the the rest of the different parties they need to come and join and to be included in that in that government. Women. Women also. I mean I'm not sure that the current government has any women. So it has to. I think also the country really now is running through very catastrophic financial, you know, some type of bank. I think we need to make sure that we need to support the Afghan people. That's why UAE is giving a lot of AIDS and also we assisted in so many, you know, tens of thousands of evacuation operation. Really now we have like more than 10,000 people waiting for their final destination in UAE. And if I can just jump in and follow up you said we need to respect the will of the Afghan people. Do you think the current situation with the Taliban back in power adequately reflects the will of the Afghan people? No, we need to call the Taliban and whatever means we have either, you know, the pressure or the current, you know, we need to make sure that the different ethnic groups, the different tribes. You see, Taliban has very unique cultural situation. You cannot impose also, you know, a different culture on them. So I mean, we tried or some countries or the international communities write other types of regime. Unfortunately, it didn't succeed. I mean, either we're talking about the 70s or after this millennium. So really, I think we need to make sure that they choose their own way, but also we need to tell them that there are some international concerns and also they need to respect the international law and also they have to make sure that they cannot work alone without. But your premise, of course, implies that the Taliban would agree to a free and fair election. Well, there are so many approaches to convince. I can say convinced, but also they are, for example, now saying that this is a transitional government. Right. So let's see. Okay. Do you want to this period? And as you know, all of us are really are monitoring and observing. Well, interesting point. Very much so, Mr. Alzabi, very much appreciate. Let's see if the Taliban itself sees itself as a transitional power that that remains to be seen. But Jim, coming back again to the US role here and the role that the wound licking, if you will, still continues in Washington. As a matter of fact, perhaps unprecedented. You have two generals in front of Congress disputing the accounts of Joe Biden saying, No, we advise them to keep to keep at least 2500 troops on the ground. He disagreed with us, or he went forward without taking into account. That's unprecedented. It plays into something I just like to say to what MK said. He said, you need to organize a retreat. I don't think any American in the military or not wanted to see what we saw. That was not the outcome that they were looking for. And no one knew that the Afghan military was going to collapse as fast as it did. And the government was going to flee. And that that whole thing was was couldn't plan for that. And 20 years of national intelligence, they can foresee. Well, you know, the so I'll tell you what the general said that where their failures were this last week, they said, First, we Americanize the war, meaning to say that they had bought a war. They taught the Afghan army how to fight along the lines of what the U. S military doesn't run over. He said that they said that you have to have good visibility in troops. And three years before the end, the U. S was draw withdrew its soldiers that were out in the field with the Afghan troops and could see what the hearts and minds were saying out there what the truth with the Afghan troops were thinking and probably would have realized to some extent how corrupt the military had become. They said that you have to train for the culture. And this is something that the American military always makes a mistake at. And that is to sort of teach them how to use our high tech weapons and things like that. And then when the infrastructure for the high tech weapons goes away, they're at sea and finally don't watch the calendar. And this is something that the idea that the calendar was ticking that everybody knew that, including the Taliban. So, you know, I just said an end date. And I just say two more things on that. Of course, as an observer, something that we've made a mistake and that too was that you don't rebuild societies. You don't reconstruct government. You do nation building from the top down. You do it from the bottom up. And unless the people of Afghanistan really want to create a democratic government or whatever government they want to create, and they now have that opportunity, you can't impose something, Western norms on them. And you have to watch out for mission creep, which is what happened. I mean, we could have gotten out as Reynolds could have gotten out of Afghanistan at any point along the line in those 20 years, including once Osama bin Laden had been killed in 2011. Barack Obama said in 2014 that we had finished our military mission. And he almost declared an end to the war at that point in 2014. So I mean, there were a number of stages along the line where the troops could have been withdrawn and probably in a much better fashion. Is that one of the main lessons that to both the US, the West NATO, whatever you want to call it, that nation building does not work? Is that one of the main lessons? It's really, it's hard to think of places at times when it has. And I mean, you know, a lot of people would say, well, there's the Marshall plan after World War Two, Germany and France and the other, the other victims of World War Two were rebuilt. But it was a question of rebuilding a nation that already existed, as opposed to what we saw in Afghanistan, which was essentially trying to build some kind of a nation that didn't exist before. Well, you know, you have covered Afghanistan, as I said, extensively. You were there during the first run of the Taliban, if you will, from 1996 to 2000. I just intervene a point on which I mean, just point so that I won't lose the credit of what he says. Just quickly, please. Yes. No, I, he said that imposition. I think the imposition of the president of the Afghanistan, you know, the Americans decided to introduce, as I meant, Hamid Karzai was there. All right, first choice. The choice of changing Hamid Karzai for Mr. Ashraf Ghani, though Ashraf Ghani certainly is an outstanding individual, but certainly was the change was done because Hamid Karzai was not seen as an American puppet. And that was, I think these are fundamental failures, which you need to, when you said, when you rebuild, okay, you went in open, blind, probably did not know. But after that, we should have realized that I just think that we mentioned that because when you said of rebuilding, you have to rebuild in many ways, particularly of a nation that did not exist. That's that's exactly what I said. That's exactly what I said that you had to we're trying to rebuild a nation that didn't exist. And after World War Two, there were nations that already existed that we were arresting the destruction. You were spot on. I think you're spot on on that. I think you need to make that I wanted to raise that point here because if you're trying it in the next time, please take note of this fact.