 Justin Weiss, welcome to WCPC-TV. You're the Director of Policy Planning at the Kedor Se, the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs. You've just been moderating a panel on terrorism. Now France has suffered some serious terrorist attacks in the past few months. Can you see a solution? You know, obviously all the panelists insisted on coordination. Coordination being the key both to defeat networks, which are transnational, and also to exchange intelligence, and also I guess methods, etc. But the problem, of course, is that beyond coordination, there are political divergence, disagreements that, of course, hinder that cooperation. And that make it difficult to go the full way in the direction of collaborating and fighting terrorism. And I'm thinking, of course, of situation in Syria with strikingly different views in the panel between among participants from the Russian view, of course, intervening on behalf of Bashar al-Assad, who is seen by many as a cause of radicalization and terrorism, to the Saudi view, which is that Bashar al-Assad indeed is the cause of terrorism. And of course, that Russia is helping this, whereas Russia thinks that by helping Bashar al-Assad, it fights terrorism more effectively because Bashar is threatened by terrorism. If you take the case of France and also other European countries and other Arab countries, you've had the attraction of ISIS, the attraction of Al Qaeda. Hasn't there been a sort of political and social failure in Europe, for example, to integrate or assimilate Muslim minorities? Because so much terrorism now, obviously it's not always Muslim, but so much of terrorism in the world today, is Islamic terrorism. Yes, and I would add so much terrorism today is directed, unfortunately, at Muslim victims and Muslim populations. But yes, the question is one that has been puzzling for some time, and that is vexing for French policymakers. What you see in various countries is always a mix of both domestic factors, the ones you mentioned about integration, and external factors. And there's no doubt that the situation in the Middle East does provide a large part of the answer, but not all of the answer. And so for this reason, the fight against terrorism, which once again cannot be anything else than collaborative, really needs to be a sort of all of the above policy where you tick all the boxes of anti-radicalization. Is it helpful to discuss these things at a thing like the World Policy Conference? It is because among the observers, analysts, policymakers, and even students sometimes, who are present here from the UN to various countries, you see different views being confronted. And some sense of belonging to what we frequently describe as the global community, or the international community, and nobody knows exactly what it is. But here at WPC, you feel that by confronting these ideas and doing it in a civil manner, even though sometimes political differences are quite sharp, you at least make some progress on the road to better cooperation. Just advice. Thank you so much. Thank you. Thanks for your invitation.