 Nelson Cunningham, thank you very much for being with us. You're a former special advisor to Bill Clinton and basically a big wheel still in the Democratic Party. How do you see the election coming up in 2016 in the U.S., affecting American foreign policy? Well, let me start off by saying that foreign policy has affected this election. The events in Paris last week, I think we're going to see reverberate in the primary process. First of all, it will lead to a consolidation on both sides. We will see voters say, in this world, we need a president who is serious, we need a president who understands the world, and a president who stands for the values that we stand for. I think that's going to lead to a consolidation around Hillary Clinton on the Democratic side and on the Republican side. It's such a large field, it's hard to know. But I'd say it's unlikely to be Dr. Carson or Donald Trump, who are the two who know the least about the world. So it will lead to a consolidation on both sides toward more experienced, more serious candidates. It's also going to change the issues. But the experienced candidate presumably is Jeb Bush, who doesn't seem to be doing very well at the moment. But Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio, what do you do? I think you put your finger on the two other people who might be there in the final rounds of the Republican debate. The Republican primary. Certainly, Jeb Bush entered the race as being the establishment favorite, and the one people thought should rock it to the top. He has floundered in the polls. He has not delivered the performances his supporters hoped. Ted Cruz is a very serious, incredibly intelligent. He was a college debater, Princeton Harvard Law School, and it shows. Marco Rubio is, perhaps, viewed as less experienced, but also extremely articulate and very substantive on the issues. And he's also a Latino. And he is a Latino. As is Ted Cruz, although Ted Cruz is a Southern Baptist, which is a whole another wrinkle, as they say in Texas. So from Hillary's point of view, who would be her favorite opponent from either one that she could defeat most easily of those two or those three, if you include Jeb Bush? Can I pick Ben Carson? No, I meant of the three, Jeb Bush or Ted Cruz or Marco Rubio. If I were Hillary Clinton, I would love to run against Ted Cruz because his support is so limited. What do you get out of the World Policy Conference? How do you think it contributes towards these ideas on foreign policy? Well, I think there's nothing like having the ability to sit down with leading thinkers in the U.S., in Europe, and Asia, as well as the Middle East, one week after Paris. What an opportunity, not in a good way, but what a way to find to capture the very best of thinking on both sides of the Atlantic from some of the best thinkers after the terrorist incidents, tragic incidents a week ago today. Nelson Cunningham, thank you very much. Thank you.