 Let's put that aside for a minute and switch now to Bernadino who had a lot to do with the Mediterranean. And I seem to remember that the EU has been promising a Mediterranean strategy for these three decades now. And the idea being that the North would help the South develop etc. And it doesn't seem to me really to have worked. And you more recently have been involved in Libya getting the UN settlement there which I guess is holding for the moment. So what's your perspective for the next, for this coming decade to 2030? I think that making predictions in this region is always difficult and normally predictions are not very accurate. But if I think of three factors that will be important in the coming 10 years, I would focus on demography, on power and on technology. I think these are three elements and each one of them with a correcting or an influencing sub-factor. Demography, let us think that one third of the population in this region are between 15 and 30 years. And another third is below 15. This gives us an idea of where we are. And it means that these two thirds of the population in the region in 10 years will be the core mainstream. And you were asking us to reflect on where economy and politics meet. This is not people who are expecting big changes or who will have big expectations politically. The region is what it is. But this is people that will expect to have jobs, to have food, to have a life. And what happens when you cannot offer that? And the region has been struggling. You remember before when I was dealing with the Arab Spring, and we always considered the Arab Spring as the consequence of the 2008 crisis. Always when you have big financial crisis, remember Algeria in the 90s, we had the bread revolt and then the elections. So, demography is going to be a huge factor. I would say the main one in the coming 10 years, affecting and influencing at the same time economic issues and political issues. What is the sub-factor here, which is important to bear in mind migration? These will produce huge migration waves. This is, first of all, a loss of talent for the region. But it is also an element that will impact what others may do. For instance, the European Union, you were asking about Europe, and unfortunately many people in Europe can see only the migration dimension when they look at the south. So, this will be an important factor influencing what others may do. Number two, power. It has been said before by people who know about this much more than I do, and it's described what the big powers will do. So, we will see two interesting factors. One is that the local powers in the region will be more active, will have to be more active. Because we have the US living, the Russians will not have the same capacity as the United States, the Chinese even less. In this region, if you are not a power ready to send an army, forget about it. Drones and technology will not replace an army. Who is ready in the world today to send an army to the Middle East? No one. Except local powers. So, we will see the peripheric powers, non-Arab powers like Iran, which has always been there, as you said before. But we will see more Turkey and Israel playing a role in the region, together with countries like Saudi Arabia, like Egypt, like UAE, etc. So, we'll see more of local engineering in the region. And I think all of them will be more pragmatic in the future. Iran is a country which has a foreign policy, which is about regime survival, about the Shia communities in the region, whereas Turkey or Israel are more pragmatic. I think they are not about regime survival. They have other concerns, and I think that's interesting. Number three, technology. It's been said this decade, we will see the paradigm of oil as dominating energy around the world changing. Most of us will use electric cars in 10 years, even if we now don't imagine that. So, the region will have to change. What is interesting is that the region is already a technology producer. It's not anymore depending on others. It's not easy to predict what technology will do. I remember 10 years ago, people were saying, oh, digital is going to transform the region because these young kids with their phones, they will organize revolutions with the digital. What we see today is that digital is the tool that authoritarian regimes are using to control their population. So, it's not easy to predict. But I think that when we see countries in the region going to space, being very important actors in renewable energies, technology can provide solutions for many of the problems we are discussing today. Food, jobs, economy, going back to your earlier question. So, I think it's a factor that will be more and more playing a positive role because necessarily they will have to replace oil. Let me make a final point, and it's not exactly technology, but it's something that home ground can be very positive, which is diplomacy. This region has been an importer of diplomacy always. The big designs, the big game, the UN resolutions. Now, this region, already for a while, has been producing excellent diplomacy. We go back to the Saudi plan for the Israeli Arab. What do you have been doing in the Horn of Africa, Ethiopia, with the Qataris in Afghanistan? So, we have more and more diplomacy. And in the coming 10 years, we will see more diplomatic initiatives from the region and less from outside. And I think this will also be good news for the region. That's a very interesting point. I hadn't thought of that, but very interesting. Your point about demography actually is the perfect segue into MUNA.