If I think back to the time when we had this incident, I ask myself what lessons we learned.
One is that we have to co-operate more closely with the countries that believe in the same values as we do—basically, all democratic countries. Regarding those countries that don't appreciate the democratic way, we just have to keep in mind that we need other solutions, technical solutions or otherwise, to prevent other incidents from happening.
I think it has certainly been reflected in the foreign policy, but more to the positive angle of how to co-operate with democratic countries. In the NATO environment, the EU, there is a very good example: somebody mentioned earlier that Estonia is quite a small country—and that's true; it's only 1.3 million people—but now we have influenced the whole European Union in that the same principles we talk about today are already implemented in the EU, where there are 500 million citizens. That certainly was the product of our foreign policy.