 Madam Secretary, it's an honor speaking to you today. I'm Maggie Barnard, a Wiser Diplomacy Fellow, pursuing a master's in public policy. Our first audience question is, what is the most important undertaking to restore American leadership and cooperation in the international order? How can the US's global leadership role be redeemed? A small question. Yes, a small question. Well, our current president could have an epiphany. You know, on the road to Damascus or somewhere, I worry that right now we're in a situation with the president and those who enable and empower him where we just have to try to hold on to what we have, because we're becoming less and less relevant in the world. We are losing our leverage along with our credibility. And people are going to start hedging their bets if they can't count on the United States to deliver the weapons that the Congress voted on to help them defend themselves in Ukraine against the Russians. What does that mean? If you fight for America and you fight with our special forces and you get rid of ISIS and then you're betrayed, what does that mean? So we have a lot of repair work to do whoever the next president is or the next Secretary of State. However, that comes about. A lot of the people who were trying to constrain or educate the president are gone. And so there's not really counter voices within the administration. And you know, I was lucky enough to serve with a president who invited dissent. We had real debates about the right thing to do and how to do it. And that doesn't seem to be happening now. So we have to do a lot of repair work. And this is a moment in history when I think the voices of others, the voices of other elected officials, the voices of citizen leaders, the voices of prominent business leaders, all need to be heard so that people around the world will know that the America that they used to count on that was there, that represented the values they aspired to, will be back. We'll find our way back.