 Dominic Muizzi, thank you very much for being a WPC TV or a special and senior advisor to IFRI and a visiting professor at King's College in London and a very distinguished political scientist. So if you look at the world now, what is the biggest problem? Is it the Islamic State? Is it Islamic fundamentalism? Is it the clash of, the potential clash of great powers in this region, Northeast Asia? What do you think? Well, I think the biggest problem is that we don't know. Is that we are confronted with the difficulty to set up a hierarchy. And we resist Russia's adventurism, face Islamic fundamentalism, worry for the rise of nationalism in Asia. In fact, we don't know. It's all of the above. But in which order? There are good questions, but I seem to remember someone said that the State Department in the US can only deal with one thing at a time. If you take the things that you've enumerated, what should they be dealing with first? Should it be Ukraine, should it be Islamic State, whatever? As a European, I would think that our first strategic problem is Ukraine, for reasons of proximity, but also for reasons of values. We have to fix limits to put in. This is our first priority. And then, of course, we have to contain and ideally roll back and then disrupt and destroy what represents Daesh, ISIS in the Middle East. And probably, there's very little we can do as European in Asia. But there is a major difference, which is that in Asia, you have Xi Jinping, who is rather pragmatic. In Europe, you have Putin, who has become, in a way, obsessed, a man with a mission, not necessarily a rational leader. On that rather sobering note, thank you very much indeed.