No. I would pretty much agree with Ms. Lester's testimony with respect to the frustration that I think the European private sector faces with respect to the way the EU sanctions are implemented, as opposed to the way that OFAC handles U.S. sanctions. Indeed, I would suggest that I believe OFAC and treasury officials in the United States occasionally express similar frustrations about the way European Union officials engage in sanctions. Part of the issue, again, is whether or not you're dealing with the EU as one or the EU as 28 members.
In the case of the United States with respect to compliance with the U.S. sanctions, I think there is some degree of frustration within the private sector about the degree to which OFAC occasionally forces them to engage in things like “know your customer” and compliance and so forth, but that said, OFAC also has a longer institutional history and institutional relationship with the banks in the United States. As a result, I think a lot of the kinks in the process have probably been a little more smoothed out in the United States.