 chaos. We know that society is a social turmoil that has not stopped one single day of other forces, the left in particular, because we are in the Egyptian army is the closest ally and by far that Washington has in Egypt. I mean, they renewed the alliance with the Muslim Brotherhood, but it's not comparable in depth and solidarity with their relation with the army. Washington in a sense understands them, understands why they are acting like that, because it's obvious that the Muslim Brotherhood failed the test of restoring law and order and managing to bring Egypt back on the path of some stability. They miserably failed in that regard. What we are facing in the Arab world is something on the scale of what you would call the English Revolution, the French Revolution, that is a revolutionary process that spreads over many years, if not many decades actually. And that's exactly what's going on, what's happening in the Arab world and we are only at an initial stage of all that. A lot is yet to come. As long as, as we have seen under Morsi and before him, the military, they are only continuing the same kind of economic policies that were enforced already in the time of Mubarak, with the IMF putting pressure for more of the same, more of the same that led to the disaster. So as long as you have this, you won't have any stability. I also can't imagine the army wanting to go to the confrontation, because that would be dangerous for the whole country actually. If the economy of Egypt is now on the verge of bankruptcy, you can imagine that if the situation degenerates even further than that, it will, I mean, it will be a total disaster. They reached their peak. This was the swan song, what we have seen, was the swan song of the Muslim Brotherhood. And I think they are engaged in a decline, which doesn't mean that they will be wiped off the map in the next year or so. They have tremendous forces, so they will still be playing, they will still be a major actor on the scene, but they, I mean, the wind is not blowing in favorable direction for them. Their strength is the weakness of the alternatives. Whatever alternative you're contemplating, left-wing or liberal, they are so weak in the region. They have shown so little ability to raise to the level of situation and bring any kind of homogeneous responses to the crisis.