 Do you have any thoughts about the approach that we might make to the Congress? Well, the one is lies, and if so, how? Well, if you make another approach to the Congress, I think really the roof will blow off this time because people who have remained quiet will no longer remain silent, and I think it would be too much of the same thing of being applied too soon one after the other. You've got the resolution, you've got the $700 million, now you've got the Mekong thing, this come up, I think you'd get this trouble that the debate would split right out. I think you might have got to have the debate eventually. Yes, sir. Do you think you will send all these troops without a debate? No, sir, I think that we've got too many in there now, and we've been bombing the North without any appreciable results showing for us in the South. I think that this thing has got to be sold in the South some way, it's not a question of withdrawal, it's not a question of bombing Hengorei or Haipong. It's just something that's going to take a lot of consideration, a lot of concentration in the South, and something to be done to try and reply, but I know you're trying to, I was seeing it for a Kenbojan conference dealing with Kenbojo. But what do we do about his request for more men? No, we have to, if it assumes the proportions that I can see it assuming, shouldn't we say to the Congress what do you want to do about it? Well, I would hate to be the one to say it, but as you said earlier, it's $75,000, then it's $150,000, then it's $300,000. Where do you stop? You don't. Where do you stop? You don't. I mean, it looks like to me, I don't see where the, to me it's shaking up like this, Mike. You either get out or you get in. I don't think there's much more neutral. I think we've tried all the neutral things. And we think they are winning. Now, if we think they're winning, you can imagine what they think. Yes, they know they're winning. And if they know that you can see that they're not anxious to find any answer to it. That's right.