 Michel Foucher, former ambassador for France and now an expert on many things in geopolitics. What do you think is the role of China in the next decade or so? I think China is clearly a big economic power, a kind of workshop for the world, which is trying to implement an economic transition from made in China to made by China, looking at innovation, high tech, and investment in peripheries, Tibet, Xinjiang, and trying to export something which is very specific of the Chinese economic model, which is other capacities. This is not very well known. It was estimated by IMF at more than 10% of GNP. So that's why President Xi Jinping started to promote a kind of what I call as a geographer, a kind of mental map which is one belt, one road, famous American Silk Road, which is by the way an American idea, Fredrick Starr and Hillary Clinton, looking at Central Asia. So they need external markets for infrastructure, company energy, and maybe digital companies. But if you're an economic power, then you become a political power as well. This is what I'm working on, but there is no automatic effect. China is trying to impose itself on regional power. And they are testing the waters, strictly speaking, the waters of China. But you have the seven fleets, the American Navy, so they are trying also to look at continental regional power where U.S. is not so present. But I don't see China transforming today its economic influence, its financial importance into proactive, geopolitical power able to take on global responsibilities. When you have a crisis in the Middle East where China is importing oil from Saudi Arabia, there is not a single proposal from China on Iraq, on Syria, same story in Africa. So we should, we need maybe one day China to have more political responsibilities. There have been Chinese representatives at this WP so conference. Do you find the World Policy Conference a useful forum for these contacts? Obviously. Obviously from the beginning, 2008, Evian, President Sarkozy, President Medvedev about global European architecture. I think in two, three years' time, I think Thierry de Montréal will come back to this real issue, which is the organization of security. In Europe, by Europe I mean the continent, European Union, NATO and Russia. We will come back to that topic. And this is also a place where, let's say, new problems are anticipated through a diversity of viewpoints, expressions. And also we can observe, you know, a permanent issue like Israel, Palestine. We don't know how to solve that. Michel Foucher, thank you very much. Thank you.