So far, chemical weapons were really the most pressing threat because we had clear indications. You followed what happened to the history on which my director general briefed this committee in December. That was urging the destruction of weapons of mass destruction, to make sure that they disappeared from Syria.
The International Atomic Energy Agency has already provided reports on some suspicion of a nuclear facility that could have been built in Syria. That has been done years ago. So far, there have been measures taken by the government in Syria—again years ago—to comply with its obligations in terms of nuclear. The IAEA provides regular reports on that, but it is not, I would say, a concern as important as chemical weapons.
In terms of cluster munitions, as I just said, they might have cluster munitions, but they don't belong to the weapons of mass destruction category.