Thank you for the question. I think it's an important one.
I'm certainly an American, but I'm an expert on China. I examine how countries around the world deal with China and what has worked and what has not. There are many middle powers and others that have been the target of economic pressure from China and have tried different approaches.
I already talked about Japan, so I will take this opportunity to cite Australia, which of course recognized that there was significant political interference in its society, its politics, and decided to pass new laws and prioritize this issue. The lesson from Australia I think is on setting priorities. There have been examples where, frankly, the United States has reached out to Australia and encouraged it to make other things a priority, to add, for example, freedom of navigation in the South China Sea to its list of priorities. The Australians have looked at all the challenges they face with China and said, look, we're going to pick the two or three that are really vital to Australian interests; with regard to the others, we care about the others, but we're not going to try to beat China over the head on everything.
I think China has respected that approach.