Yes, okay, I can do that.
It goes back to one of the first issues we were discussing this morning. A variety of rights are standard in these treaties, and the FIPA provides substantive protection--the right, for example, not to be expropriated, and the right not to be discriminated against in terms of national treatment. There are a variety of standard rights. That is in the FIPA; in the case of NAFTA, it's in the actual NAFTA.
This treaty does not have any of those substantive rights. It doesn't say “Thou shalt not expropriate” or any of that. All it really deals with is that if one investor thinks another country has, for example, expropriated, then they have a place to go to have the arbitration heard, a facility that's very professional and up and running, and if they are successful in making their case, it provides a way to have it enforced easily, efficiently, and cost-effectively.
It doesn't give substantive rights; it's not substantive obligations. That's what's in the actual negotiated treaty--for example, the treaty we negotiated with India just a while ago, and the NAFTA in the case of Mexico.