 Let's get more on this. Priscilla Klapp was the former chief of mission at the U.S. Embassy in Myanmar from 1999 to 2002. She is now a senior advisor to the U.S. Institute of Peace and the Asia Society. She joins us from Washington. Welcome. Thank you very much for joining us on the program. What is your assessment of the news that we're getting? Looking at this draft bill, as our colleague has done, Jonah Fisher, that there could be a special position for Aung San Suu Kyi in this new government? Well, this is the first that I've heard of that proposal, but I can only take a guess. I would say that it would be a very interesting position for her to be taking so long as she retains the ministerial portfolios that have been assigned to her, because that's where the real power is. If she's an advisor, she's an advisor, and she can cut across ministry lines and lines within the government and work between the parliament and the executive branch, as she's an advisor to the state. But within the executive branch, she needs to be foreign minister to sit on the National Defense and Security Council, which she wants to do clearly. But the other ministerial portfolios that she has are equally powerful in their own way. And I think that she needs to keep those in addition to being advisory. I can't see that the advisor alone would enhance her power at this stage. And let's talk about that power principle, because in essence, people are hoping for, we've seen them come out on the streets on a historic day that many believe wouldn't happen in their lifetime. They're hoping for some kind of a change. But realistically, Priscilla, how likely is that change going to happen in, say, the next few years or even 10 years to come, given the whole the military have had on governing the people of Myanmar? It's very difficult to predict right now, because this is a massive revolution that we're witnessing. Nobody really expected that this transition would move so quickly from military to civilian. The results of the November elections have created a majority civilian government. And it's in the hands of the NLD, a single party, it's going to be able, the NLD is going to be able to manage this government more effectively than the USDP did in the last government, because they are much more united and they have a united philosophy. So there won't be the tension between the parliament and the executive branch, particularly the president's office that we saw in the last government, which rendered it so dysfunctional towards the end. So I think that it has enormous power to make things happen. It can legislate. It can pass new laws. It can remove old laws in the parliament. It can't change the constitution. But there are many other things that they can do short of that. And eventually, I think they can move in the direction of making constitutional changes as practical. And particularly, that will depend upon the peace process and the success that they have in moving the peace process forward. Because the military leaders have said, we will pull back when we know the country is at peace. And we were able, and we were able to remove all of these extraneous armed forces in the country. And there are many, many of them. It's fascinating to talk to you, Priscilla. Thank you so much for joining us. Priscilla Klap, the former chief of mission at the US Embassy in Myanmar.