 Dominic Muizzi, welcome. You are a senior advisor to IFRI and a professor at Harvard, former commentator on foreign affairs. Now next year there will be an election in the United States and from January 2017 there will be a new U.S. president. What do you want in terms of foreign policy from the next U.S. president? Then we would find the right balance between the policy of George W. Bush, which was too much, and the policy of Barack Obama, which was slightly too little. So a balance between the two. And if you look at the current situation, do you feel that America leading from behind to use one expression is actually leading from far too behind? Yes, America is behind, but it's not leading. And so there's a problem. There's an acceleration of history. There was a complete disconnect between the personal agenda of President Barack Obama and, so to speak, the agenda of the world, who went into chaos partly because President Obama refused to change his agenda. What would you rather he had done? Actually in 2013, when the regime of Bashar al-Assad crossed a red line in Syria, he should have done what he had said he would be doing. Do you think that has caused lasting damage to the perception of America in the world? Yes. And on top of it, this was a turning point. A turning point for Putin, who sees Crimea when he saw that a turning point for Daesh, who in fact decided that, well, Sunni had been abandoned. They had to fight for themselves. Now we discuss these things at the World Policy Conference. Do you think that the WPC actually has an influence on policy makers? The word influence is very probably exaggerated, but it's a background noise, and a background noise is important. Dr. Muizi, thank you so much.