 Well, we'll be talking more about North Korea in a moment. First, let's just focus on the Middle East. And for that, I'm joined by William Taylor, a former State Department official who's now with the U.S. Institute of Peace. You've just flown back, actually, today from Afghanistan. President Trump said his top national priority was dealing with Islamic status. Is he getting the right way about it? Apparently, he's had some success in Afghanistan on reducing the numbers of the Islamic State fighters, and we've seen today, yesterday, that this big bomb is focused on that without any civilian casualties that we know of so far. So that's a strong step. He gave his generals, I think, 30 days to come up with a strategy to defeat the Islamic State. What have we learned so far? Is it really just very similar to what Obama did, but with more cash? General McMaster, as your report indicated, is enroute out there right now. He's well respected. He's spent a lot of time in Afghanistan, knows it well, knows the challenges. He's part way through a review to come up with a new strategy. And we will see, I think, shortly what kind of strategy he comes up with. And just staying with Afghanistan, I mean, does that mean more troops? Because he has asked for a few thousand more, perhaps. Not a huge surge. General Nicholson has asked for several thousand more, not a surge, as you say, but some additional troops that would allow him to put Americans down a layer or two in the Afghan army, the Afghan national forces. This would help them, the Afghan national forces, do what they need to do. But I think General McMaster is going to evaluate that request. I don't think that decision has been made yet. It's moving, of course, to the Middle East now. I mean, it's a truism, isn't it, that you can't defeat Islamic State just militarily. I think that's very important. That's the important question in Afghanistan as well as in Syria. The Afghanistan situation is such that there's a well-developed, or developing military strategy for the defeat of ISIS and trying to get control of Taliban. There needs to be, this is what our sense was at the Institute of Peace, there needs to be a corresponding political strategy. They've got elections coming up, they have negotiations possibly with the Taliban. That needs to be integrated in with a stronger military. Yeah, but so much ground that had been taken by the coalition in Afghanistan has now been re-taken by the Taliban who are fighting Islamic State. The Taliban are supporting the Islamic State in some sense. We're getting back to where we were earlier, where the Taliban was providing refuge, support for terrorist organizations, including the Islamic State in Afghanistan. So we're focused on Islamic State, also trying to figure out how we can either co-opt or defeat the Taliban. Okay. We'll leave that. Thank you very much. Thank you.