 I can see now on my screen that we might be able to bring in our participant from Israel. Yeah, look at that. I do see something great. Excellent. I'm really happy about that. Just to tell you guys, I'm wearing my headphones. Maybe this is for the technical crew because the monitors, it makes it very difficult for me to understand what people at the other end even next to me are saying, so I'm just wearing this for my own benefit. Thank you very much. Now, Itamar Rabinovich, can you hear me? Yes, I can. Excellent. Can you hear me? We can, and we're so glad that you're with us because your voice in this conversation is essential. Can you tell us where you're joining us from? We can see you're in a vehicle. In a vehicle, we had some understanding about the panel, so I'm not at my home as I plan to be. I'm in my car, but speaking on my phone, but here I am anyway, and delighted to be with you. Excellent. We can see and hear you very well, and it's just fine that you're in that car. We're very glad that you can join us today. Would you like to offer a few comments? We've just been getting underway. I did an introduction of our guests, including yourself with the hope that you would be joining us. We've heard from a couple of speakers so far. We've touched on some of the themes. We've been in email contact with one another, so we're staying pretty much on track with what we discussed. Would you like to offer some comments to the plenary at this point over the next couple of minutes before we move on to the next speaker? Yes. I think that we need to look at the so-called the day after. We must have a vision of where we want to take the region and the Arab-Israeli relationship to, which means dealing with the larger Palestinian question in the Israeli relationship with the Palestinian Authority. I heard the reference before to the West against the rest. It doesn't have to be that. I think that several countries in the Middle East do not see the problem with the West but see the problem with Iran. Our host itself, Saudi Arabia and others, have been the targets of violence by proxies of Iran. I see that the current war is not just a war between Israel and Hamas, but between Israel and Israel is targeted or threatened by five Iranian proxies. And in order to organize the region to deal with these issues, there will have to be a plan for dealing with the Israeli-Palestinian relationship. It's difficult to envisage it. We're in the middle of a war. We have the wrong government, the wrong Israeli government for doing that, but the need is there. The debate inside Israel today is, do you deal with the political issues domestically in the middle of a war? Do you wait for the end of the war, whatever that end may be? But I hope that at the end of it there will be a government in Israel that would be willing to look at the larger picture and to fit into a scheme that would help organize the region, including dealing with the larger Palestinian question. Thank you very much. If you don't have anything to add, we'll move along. It didn't take you very long to get to Iran and Iran's proxies, the role that they're playing in this war. I think that's a hugely important part of this, of course. We need to discuss that. It's also important what you mentioned about the political context within Israel itself and the ability of the Israeli government or willingness of it to address this problem in a constructive way. These are question marks that you've raised. Thank you. Thank you for now. If you don't have anything else to add, I don't want to interrupt you. Our connection seems to be stable. I hope it will stay that way. So we'll continue then here on the panel bringing in voices.