I think speaking from my experience last week and just placing.... I know that Mr. Garneau and Mr. Dewar were in Erbil late last year with then-minister Baird. Speaking about the context and the perceptions that one may have of a humanitarian emergency, on the logistical part, oftentimes we talk about logistics being a challenge or roads being a challenge very concretely. Especially in Kurdistan, that is not the case. The roads and the logistics are very much in place.
I think from our perspective the key challenge really is access. It's finding and determining where displaced populations are and being able to access them in the most effective way. Very concretely, then, a challenge obviously is the ongoing violence that is still occurring within close proximity of our operational area. We're not able at the moment, obviously, to access populations that are behind the front lines, if you will, just outside of Kurdistan. But that is a concern that I think the humanitarian organizations share in Iraq as well as inside Syria, specifically where you have large numbers of people being caught in areas that we're not able to access because either it's too dangerous to access or we can't actually negotiate the kind of access that we need to negotiate.
That points to one of the recommendations we've made. Unless there's a political solution to this process, to the ongoing violence, we will not find ourselves in a situation where we can actually operate in those areas that are affected by violence.
I don't know, Bart, if you have anything to add.