 Ladies and gentlemen, thank you very much for braving the after-lunch panel, which is always a challenge. There's a lot to talk about, unfortunately, someone who was on our panel, who was acting director of policy planning has had to be called away. You can't hear? No, we can't hear. Put on the headsets, then. Oh, the other ones. I mean, yeah, put these on because then you can hear me and each other through the headsets. Anyway, I regret Mr. All-Naidi couldn't be here, but we have a lot to talk about. We're in the Middle East after all, so it's only appropriate we have at least one real panel on the region. There's so much to talk about, the impact of Russia's return to the region, China's Belt and Road, the notion of U.S. retrenchment, whether it's real or not, intensified regional competition. What does it mean for these countries to have a green, carbon-free world? Let alone wars in Libya, Syria, Yemen, big regional powers playing in the region, repositioning of Israel to put it mildly in the Abraham Accords and what public response has been, heightened tensions with Iran, the Moriban state of the JCPOA, though no one dares to actually take its pulse and call it dead, because that would mean they'd have to decide what to do next, which they don't want to do. We have problems with Turkey, which is very much engaged now, making geopolitical forays. Then there's the quite interesting question of the return of Bibi Netanyahu at the head of a very different Israeli government. What does this new coalition mean for Israel, for the Palestinians, for Israel's reputation, frankly? Then there's the question of the health of Abu Mazen, what happens to the Palestinian Authority. There's always the sad tragedy of Lebanon, the influence of Hezbollah, the worry about another Lebanon-Israeli war, but with rockets, big, big rockets. Then we also have divisions in Europe toward the region. We're going to try, since we started late, to end this on time at 1545, and without one panelist, maybe we can get there. I'll try to have some time for questions at the end. But the idea was, because the topic is so broad and our panelists so diverse, wonderfully diverse, to ask people to speak for a few minutes about the topics I've mentioned that interest them, and I may have then asked them a question or two, and then we'll go down. So...