I'll just add a point on the corruption issue, and I do it with some sensitivity to the fact that you're all elected members of Parliament.
You have to understand that some of the people who have been involved with practices that we want to condemn were elected to the national assembly in Afghanistan. We even met a Stalinist--an unreconstructed communist--who would like to see a return of the Soviet Union to Afghanistan. So the point I'm trying to make is that sometimes when you sow the seeds of democracy, you don't get a pristine verdict from the electorate. There may be many reasons why some of these people are elected by their local people, but it's very difficult for the international community to go in and impose a standard of democracy that suits our interests, as opposed to what they see as being in their interest.
I'm not excusing it; I'm just trying to put it in with a degree of realism that it may be a little unusual.