 What do you think about this cube of water? Well, from a military point of view, we're in no trouble. We have tankers and contingency plans, and we can keep up our water supply for some time. From a political point of view, I think it's dynamite. I was just sitting here talking to Clark Quipper, who was over with us on some other problems. And I think we all agreed it has great potential to mend the effects associated with it. I talked to Dean Rusker a few minutes ago about it. He's got the date working on it with a glass, in fact. But Max Taylor has already started putting into effect our own contingency plan to ensure maintenance is provided to the base. You've got a water supply program where you can supply them without the FGF, that is correct. I guess there'll be great demands that we declare war. Go after them. I mean, the rebel risers start hollering. I guess that we could probably go to blockade or something. That'd be our best pressure. Well, we could, but I doubt very much that that would be the first Agment President to me, and I haven't. I'm not talking about the first one, but I'm talking about the alternatives. But we could do shorter. It seemed to me the first thing we should do is check up on the details of these plans. And we have Admiral Davis who's presently doing that, so we know exactly how much water we can get in there and how long we can last with it. If it is as I believe it is, that we can hold out indefinitely. Then I think two of this news is made public. We ought to immediately put out our statements that it's been inconvenient, but we have other ways of supplying water to the base and it'll not affect our military deployment in any way whatsoever. I haven't given state a little time to figure out how to put some pressure on Cuba.