 Well, I would like to begin by saying that the 19th of March, 2003, was a very fateful day for all of us around the world, because it was the beginning of a clearly illegal invasion. Anyone who today still wants to argue that this invasion had the legitimacy of the UN Security Council is wrong. It was simply not done in accordance with Article 51 of the UN Charter. So that decision sat in motion with something which in the end didn't improve, but rather worsened the condition of the Iraqi people. And the body that was created to prevent conflict, to solve conflicts, to make sure that wars wouldn't take place anymore, was put in the icebox. Two countries, the UK and the US, led by the United States no doubt, decided to become an occupation force that seemed to have forgotten that there was something called the Hague Convention. There was something that would determine how the incoming soldiers would behave. And much later, in 2011, when President Obama decided to withdraw US troops from Iraq, one could make a tally of what had happened in those intervening eight years. And what has happened is a frightening evidence of the disregard of all the laws that have been created to prevent war crimes, to prevent crimes against humanity. And the main victim, the main victim no doubt, is other people in Iraq. But they are not the only victims. Another victim is international law and the institution that was meant to become the calibrator for the maintenance of international law and that is the United Nations. So we have a pretty bad picture. And if then people come and say we don't have the evidence, then I would like to remind these people how much evidence there is, how many more tribunals do we need? We had a Brussels tribunal. We had an Istanbul tribunal. We had in Kuala Lumpur for the last 10 years a tribunal, a war crimes tribunal. I'm a member of this tribunal. We have had on the 14th of December 2014, we had the release and it was a courageous step by Senator Dianne Feinstein to release the report on CIA torture. We've had in the UK the Chilcot Surgeon Chilcot inquiry. We have had other evidences of the violation of the UN torture convention. And the question that one needs to ask and I hope will be asked in Washington is how much more evidence do we need before finally the judicial process begins and the perpetrators are held accountable. These perpetrators sit in London, they sit in Washington and in other places, but they are free. Reminds me a little bit of what the Mexican ambassador in 1945 when this UN organization was created said and he did say the following. He said we have created an institution where we can control the mice but the tigers will continue to roam around freely. Well, those tigers that are still roaming around freely that have killed so many of their victims need finally to be held accountable. And let me in this brief intervention just say a big thank you to Code Pink for having decided to have this tribunal in order to come one step closer to the time when cases will be handled by courts either at the national level and if that doesn't happen by the international court of justice. I should repeat that not the international court of justice but the international criminal court. All good wishes to Code Pink.