That's also a very good question.
The Internet manipulation that I spoke of is part of a larger set of issues. Mr. Pankowski also knows this very well. In addition to what's going on online, there is a larger Russian-backed assault on liberal democracy in Europe and an attempt to promote the far right to create ethnic conflict.
I should stress that although you are right to emphasize the Russian support for it, quite a lot of it is native, and there is plenty of native—native meaning native French or German or Polish or Czech—support for these movements and ideas as well. I don't want to imply that it's only or solely Russian.
In the European elections we have seen actually for the first time—and I have just written something about this that will be published on the weekend—some of these groups beginning to work together across borders in the online world and also even in the world of funding of one another's projects. We do see, paradoxically, a kind of cross-European internationalist nationalism whereby groups in different countries are seeking to support one another, so the far right in Germany supports the far right in France, which supports the far right in Poland and so on. That is one of the dynamics that we will be seeing in the coming European election. Really for the first time this internationalist nationalism will be working as a whole using common themes across Europe.
Just as a final point, we saw this, and it was fascinating, after the fire that took place in the Notre-Dame de Paris Cathedral days ago where there were similar responses all over Europe echoing and using one another's memes and language, and this is the kind of event that is now being promoted across Europe by similar kinds of groups.