It comes back to what I had said earlier, that really what we're seeing from the Saudis is non-action. It is continuing to produce much as you would expect a competitive producer to act.
What they have seen is an erosion of their market power from the factors that Mr. McLellan mentioned. The Saudis used to have the ability to create a low price environment that would shut out high-cost producers, and then to step back their own production, see prices rise, and take advantage of those rents. Now they don't have that second part.
They could cut production now. Prices would bounce up, but who would fill that gap? It would be more light oil production in the U.S., etc. They wouldn't have the ability to then profit from those high prices in the same way.
When you hear people talking about competing on market share, that's kind of the story. They know somebody else is going to flood in on them, be it alternative fuels or other producers. I think you're really seeing a non-active response. I wouldn't quite characterize it as actively as conferring a hat on the U.S. swing producers as Mr. McLellan did. It's just the reality of the new market.