 So, another country, obviously in the news right now is Ukraine. Secretary Rice, when she was here last week, said that Ukraine is at risk of becoming known as a scandal rather than a country. How do we refocus attention and energy, not just on the role of Ukraine and the U.S.-Russian relationship, but the broader set of relationships we have in the region that are going to be needed to move towards a post-Putin Russia at some point in the future? From your lips to God's ears. You know, I think Ukraine is a centrally located, important, strategic country in Europe that straddles east and west. And it has been yearning to be part of Europe. That's what its revolution was about, the Maiden Square Revolution. They've had a lot of mishaps and a lot of setbacks because their leadership was not up to the job. There were several people who tried and were overcome by circumstances, and one Ukrainian president overcome by radiation poisoning, and another accused of corruption and thrown in jail. And so there is a lot of growing pains in Ukraine, and it is a place that I think both Europe and the United States have a real stake in trying to help stabilize, trying to help modernize their economy and support their efforts to move toward a more secure democracy. And of course, we've seen two very aggressive moves just in the last, you know, 10, 11 years from Putin. We've seen his invasion of Georgia and the seizing of two provinces in Georgia, one strategically located on the Black Sea, down the road from where he has his dacha, near Sochi where the Olympics were held. He just basically seized this part of Georgia and another part further north. And then, of course, he invaded Ukraine and he seized Crimea, and he kept troops in eastern Ukraine. Because Ukraine, in his view, belongs to Russia, doesn't belong to Ukrainian people. It doesn't in any way belong to their aspirations and hopes for being part of Europe, and maybe even someday part of the European Union. And what he has done is to set up a very difficult problem for whoever is in leadership positions in Ukraine. Because with his domination of eastern Ukraine and the presence of Russian troops and the constant arming of Ukrainian civilians who are sympathetic to Russia, if Ukraine doesn't have friends who can try to help deter further Russian aggression, they are in a quandary. Do they place their hopes in Europe, in the United States, or do they surrender to the inevitability that Russia could seize them anytime they wanted to and nobody would come to their rescue? So the whole Ukrainian scandal in the midst of the impeachment inquiry in and of itself is troubling because of what it shows about abuse of power and the use of threats and extortion by the President of the United States withholding military aid that they so desperately need to defend themselves. So it's a scandal, it's an absolute appropriate scandal and it should have triggered the impeachment inquiry, but let's not lose sight of the larger issue that you raised, Mike. The current President of Ukraine, who has no political experience, he was a TV star, sound familiar, so he's in a bind. He's got the American president threatening him. He's got the Russian president threatening him. He's just trying to figure out how to be a president, and from everything we know about him, he wanted to bring energy and modernism to his presidency. And what's happening now is he's accepted an agreement that there will be elections in Ukraine, in eastern Ukraine, which remember the Russians dominate, the Russian media dominates. There'll be elections for the people of that part of Ukraine to decide whether they want to break away and join Russia like Crimea or stay in Ukraine. He probably felt like he had no choice. The Russians are breathing down his necks, and there is evidence that Russian troops are moving to the border again in pretty large numbers. And then one thing that hasn't gotten a lot of attention that I just want to mention is that there is a treaty that we've been a member of. In fact, we were the architect of that goes back many decades called Open Skies. And it permits satellites and other surveillance mechanisms to see what's happening on the ground around the world. And just out of the blue, the Trump administration announced they were going to pull us out of the Open Skies Treaty. And if I were guessing, one of the consequences of that is we will not necessarily be able to discover all the troop movements that Russia is engaged in on the brink of forcing their will on Ukraine. So Ukraine deserves a lot more help and a lot more attention than we are currently giving it except in the kind of scandal mode. It's a real country with real people who thought they were going to get a real chance to have a better future. And now they are caught between our political games here in the United States and Russian aggression. And it's really a very unfortunate situation.