 Okay, good afternoon. Thank you. And since Russia's European identity is kind of ambivalent or split identity. I can give you two lists of European uncertainties, what I consider. One is how we see your European if we mean Europe by EU and how we see European if we mean a slightly wider Europe. So it's Brexit. You care so much about it, but I guess it's returned to kind of traditional already existed in history. Trilateral structure of the Euro-Atlantic West and nothing new strategically happens in this case. Migration inflow, it's still uncertainty, but I guess you already got used to this inflow and thanks God it's stopped and now it could resume because of what's happening in Kurdistan, in Syria, where there are new offensive of Turkey. Then it right-wing parties, right-wing politicians and even traditionalists. If women, Poland for example, those who are still in power, I don't know whether you're going to keep, now it's their chance is really very strong. They're traditionalists, but those traditionalists, those who nowadays Europe are kind of really old-fashioned and those who make various upon the say greater dynamism of Europe for the development of the European Union and sure here from Russia that are two two different attitudes. Once it's to follow you, let's say kind of general public attitude that it's a kind of challenge, it's something new, it's outstanding, it's all that stuff. And another, some of the Russians that they consider that they can play with these right-wingers and traditions that are not always traditionalists ready to interact with the Russians once again in this Polish case. Balkans, sure they're not any more as white as they were previously, such an immense field of problems, but this bunch of Soviet, Kosovo and Macedonia, it's still there, it's still an uncertainty. Then it's Trump's U.S. foreign policy towards Europe that makes U.S. more distant from Europe, that somehow poses difficulties inside Europe. It brings additional problems when it comes to overall organization of world trade and makes all the agreements of EU with its neighbors, traditional partners, including African or ACP partners, let's say more complicated, since U.S. behaves in the world trade system in an absolutely non-WTO, let us say, way. And then another list, a list of, let us say, great Europe problems. First of all, it's Ukraine, then it's Turkey, because Turkey provokes European problems outside Europe, but then they come to Europe again with momic brachia, again with unrest in the Middle East, again with new, sometimes very surprising unions, alliances when it comes to the situation in the Middle East, it involves the Europeans, and sure Russia itself. Do you mind if I just come back, I'm just curious, why do you think Russia is so attractive to European right wing wingers? How do you explain that to yourself? I guess it's simply very official and wrong attitude, because they simply say something that different from what those who are traditionalists, I mean traditionalists in Western Europeans say, they say different things than the governments, and it's old-fashioned game that dates to the between war periods to find out different awkward groupings and to deal with them having in mind their potential access to power. But I guess both this attitude is wrong, and next that those awkward groupings in spite the fact that they haven't to be very numerous, that they come at once in some periods to the European scene, that they know, that say, kind of overwhelming friend in Europe.