 So that makes it a very, very dangerous kind of moment because war could break out all these provocations in the South China Sea and around Taiwan and all this stuff, all the hateful rhetoric that gets directed about China. You know, it creates a situation where, you know, as Chairman Mao used to say in a very different way, a single spark can start a prairie fire if you're at that level of intense confrontation and intense militarization, even if it's only largely on one side. Minor event can trigger things that lead to a maximalist global conflagration. It's a super dangerous strategy. And again, there's Kurt Campbell right at the heart of that, you know, the Center for New American Security, his time at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. All of these have been efforts on his part to articulate a rationale, a justification for these policies that doesn't take seriously the kind of existential threat that they pose.