Merci beaucoup. Thank you very much. I'll share my time with Mr. Wrzesnewskyj.
First, Mr. Sedra, I must say that you were very straight, talking about Afghanistan, talking about corruption at all levels of government, including the police. But at the end you were a little bit positive, in the sense that you mentioned that it doesn't mean if there is that much corruption that the Taliban will win the war in a sense, because it's more located down south.
But my question is concerning Pakistan. You mentioned Pakistan. There is a lot of oppression in Pakistan. Even President Musharraf sent more than 80,000 troops over there. Seven of his soldiers died over there in the FATA, or in Waziristan itself. You know much more than me about that. They didn't succeed over there. They are out over there.
Knowing that Pakistan cannot control that area, and the Brits were unable to control that area many years ago, my question is, is it not time, if we want to have Pakistan changing its opinion, because in a sense Pakistan's friends are the Taliban—? Musharraf, as a military man coming there from a coup d'état has much more affinity with the Taliban than he has with the secular oppositions at any time. You don't feel it's time that the international community tries to get a real conference about the geopolitical area, including mainly India, Russia, China, the P5, and the European Union, things like this, because it doesn't seem that we're going to find any solution if we don't go that route?
Merci.