 Good afternoon. I hope you had a pleasant lunch. My name is Marcus Noland. It is my distinct honor to moderate this panel on Asian security. The first day I heard Mr. Rabinowitz describe going to a church and hearing the preacher preach about a passage in the book of Matthew in which Jesus says the last will be first and the first shall be last. Well, we're nearly the last, but I think maybe if we're not the most important, we're nearly the most important panel. We have two speakers who have very tight airplane connections, so I'm going to skip reading the bios because once I started reading them, I realized that all of our speakers are prestigious former government officials or hold prestigious academic positions and you can read the details. What I thought we would do is start in Northeast Asia because that's where the North Korean issue is most acute. We'll start with Mr. Yim from South Korea followed by Mr. Hosoya from Japan, Mr. Ja from China. Then we'll move to Southeast Asia with Mr. Yao followed by Yusuf Wynandi and then Mr. Narayan from India. Mr. Narayan seemed a little displeased about going last, but I had to remind him that according to Jesus, he's got the most prestigious position on the panel.