Yes. Thank you for the opportunity to clarify.
I think that, when assessing and trying to unpack behaviour and interpret the implications of that behaviour from a particular state, there is a risk of threat inflation that we need to take into account. There is a risk in terms of assuming that speculation about what is going on is evidence that this particular behaviour that we expect is in fact going on. We should be mindful of a tendency to think that there is an analogy, that what Russia is doing in the international stage means that China will necessarily embark on similar courses of action. It is important to consider that China's relationship with the existing international order is much more ambiguous, and it is much less clear that China is aiming to act as much as a spoiler and a destabilizing force when it comes to the international order as Russia is at the moment.
It's about being wary about drawing analogies.