 The Prime Minister had the other part of the country, and President Trump had the other part of the country to see. Good morning. Good morning. I hope you've got some rest. Yes, Mr. President. Thank you very much. At the same time, in this country of ours that we've had, we've had some assistance for floods. I'll put it so. Welcome your visit. Continue. The tradition of necessities will have become a tradition between our two countries. We certainly support your independence in the territory of integrity. And I'm pleased with the economic progress that you've made in 1984. And no, of course, that your stabilization program has been difficult. The most supportive of your continued efforts there. Thank you very much. Thank you very much. Thank you very much. I would like to say to you that you have always been a welcome guest in the U.S. and that you have a standing invitation to come visit us. Thank you very much. In the United States, we've been in the United States, in all of its extended talks. With the end of the assessment that we knew each other well, the United States of America is a strategic orientation of both one country and the other. The great need to have a continuity of dialogue on all matters which are interested and conducted with a great deal of thought. What was the travel of the damn thing? Somebody locked it. You mean with a key? Yeah. Oh, not the sliding? No. Ah, I only could do is stick something in the keyhole and break it off. Hello. Hello. Susan King. We said hello. We did. We will again. How are you? I'm doing pretty well. Doing very well. All right. The other day. Well, this President, I'm going to sit there. George is going to sit there. No, I'm not. I want to hear, hear, hear. I want to hear. President Pittsburgh. All that stuff. That was a great idea the last few years. There was a lot of people sitting there. I don't know why so many people are objectively going to Pittsburgh. But all I see on television, all I see is Jim Pooch. I don't see the President. Jim ran around all over the place. I had a nice meeting with Hussein yesterday, Mr. President. And I was telling him about it. We talked for about 30 minutes. He spoke to himself. That's not why I'm here, obviously, but I would like to add that. I think we're headed for a big problem. If we get the Soviets back involved in that conference, I think it's going to be an irresistible stage for them to demo God. To repoliticize the problems in the Middle East, at least to repolarize it. And that I think it's a mistake. And he thinks he has to do that in order to, quote, have international cover and all that sort of thing. But for whatever it's worth, my political instincts tell me that that is a tough, bad deal. And I don't want to lose Hussein or jeopardize Hussein, but I want to say that. I just, even though he says that it would be an umbrella with the negotiations only taking place between the Israelis and the Arabs and the Palestinians.