 CNO and Mrs. Gilday, Admiral Schulz, heads of your navies and coast guards, I'd like to ask you to join me in thanking International Programs Dean Tom Mangold, who has been performing the duties of MC for this week. Thank you, Tom, and so many others who were critical to our success, including the OPNAV staff, Captain Jess O'Brien, our wonderful technical team. Thank you for all that you did to project us virtually and here and in Pringle Auditorium. Our security teams, both at the college and the base, but also our partnership with local and state security forces. Our transportation team, our command center, our cadre of naval attaches, and all the non-delegates who made each logistics movement happen seamlessly for us. It's been a tremendous cooperative attempt to provide the best experience for these important dialogues here at our Navy's home of thought, the United States Naval War College. In the future when you come, we will look forward to hosting you and until then we will always take care of your students that you send to our programs. Thank you so much for being part of this shipbuilding program. Now it's not my term, it's one of our professors, Mark Turner, but he said, you know, we've got friendships, partnerships, and relationships. And so I'm deeply grateful for all of your effort toward that end while you were here. And now it is my honor to present our Chief of Naval Operations, Mike Gilday, for his closing remarks. Good morning, everyone. We had two simple goals for this conference. The first was to create an environment for a candid and open discussion and to be inclusive so that everybody could join in. The second was to really set the environment for relationship building. And then my colleagues and I who set up the conference and they did all the work, we talked about what success would look like at the conclusion of the conference. And the first measure of success was your showing up, whether it was here in person or virtually. And so to you, thank you for showing up. During a global pandemic, this was not easy. But that really was our first measure of success. And the second measure of success was that you go home having bonded again with friends that you've known for some time and to make new friends. And so I think, you know, the goals that we had set and then those measures of success, in my view, I think that at the end you're the judge. But at least from my perspective, I really think that we did well this week. And so I thank you all. I'd also like to thank the invisible hands who, as Admiral Chatfield mentioned, really played an enormous role in helping us make this possible this week. The first is Admiral Chatfield, where did she go? And her wonderful husband, David. And the entire War College team, including Tom, thank you for moderating. I'd also like to call out there are three retired heads of Navy, Admiral Barrera from Columbia, Admiral Verma from India, and Admiral Saunas from Norway. They together with their spouses gave Linda and I some very good feedback a few months ago that helped us shape this con, the substance of this symposium, including the spouses program. And so they have been to two or three or five ISS's in the past, and they were wonderful in helping us. So thank you very much, gentlemen, and to your wives as well. Please pass along our thanks. I'd also like to thank officers on our staff from the Pentagon who did really yeoman's work in putting this week together, led by Admiral, Vice Admiral Bill Merce, who was just our seven fleet commander in Yokosuka, Japan, but now serves in the staff in the Pentagon. Along with Rear Admiral Tom Williams and the indispensable Captain Jessica O'Brien, who if you get to see Jessica at lunch today, she is a phenomenal leader. Also our security personnel and medical personnel who kept, who protected us and kept us safe this week. The chefs that fed us multiple meals this week. Our Navy reservists who literally came from all over the country to pitch in. I'd also like to thank my colleagues in the United States Navy, my fellow admirals in the Navy, in the Marine Corps, and in the Coast Guard. Carl, thank you for everything you did this week, along with your spouses. So for the international spouses, I know that you made great friends this week with our U.S. spouses. That was not by happenstance, that was by design. So they took time out of their busy schedules to come here to join you. And I think have been a big part of this week's success. So I thank all of our U.S. colleagues. And finally, I'd like to thank all of our international delegates and their spouses for coming here. Again, thank you very, very much. If I could have the next image, and I'll use this just to close with a few comments. And I mentioned this in my introductory remarks, but I think it's a good way to close as well. I did not have this slide when I spoke on Wednesday. But a few months ago, I had the opportunity to do a video teleconference with a Navy sailor who was an astronaut on the International Space Station, and he was serving in space along with cosmonauts from Russia and a fellow astronaut from Japan. And he captured for me so clearly the bonds of his fellow star sailors as they shared months at a time off of Earth. And he so eloquently described that our giant big blue marble of a planet has no lines that separate our people. And it's dominated, of course, by the blue hue of our oceans. So as we close this ISS, I leave you with this image of a blue world where commerce and this week ideas flow freely across the open seas to connect our nations and bonds of fellowship. And sailors and coast guardsmen like us maintain strength and unity to keep it so. Thank you all. God bless you all.