I think that's a very valid answer, Ambassador, but perhaps you could reflect from your experience in Libya, or from having studied the political and, I assume, judicial systems in Libya, on what will come out of the other end of this process and the transitional authority.
One of the concerns I have is that the answer will be that he'll be tried before some Libyan justice system. I'm asking you to imagine what that might look like at the other end of whatever process we're in, so it's probably not a fair question, but based on the justice system that exists in Libya now, do you have any faith that they have the capacity in Libya to bring Colonel Gadhafi to justice?
That's going to be the obvious off-ramp. They're going to say that the domestic law, the national law, trumps the International Criminal Court proceedings and that we shouldn't worry, because they have a courtroom set up and a jury empanelled and a defence attorney appointed for him from some legal aid regime. I'm sure he'll have a fair trial. It will last about 15 minutes, and the appeal period will be five more minutes, and then at the other end a sentence will be imposed. We've seen that in the past. That, in my mind, would not send the world a great message about what we've achieved if the process to bring him to justice is full of obvious contradictions.
Do you have any view on how that might work, based on what exists now?