Yes.
Thank you, Dr. Fry, for this question.
What characterizes the threat posed by the IRGC is that it is multi-faceted, constantly evolving and everywhere. Its members are involved in cyberspace, in the ballistics program, in the nuclear program, in spare parts trafficking. They're in Sudan. They're in Latin America. They work in Central Asia. They work in the Caucasus. They have their hands in a host of different files.
As a result, the right approach to tackling this protean and multi-faceted phenomenon called IRGC is not to act on just one front, but rather to do as it does, i.e., to use a multifaceted approach.
I agree with Mr. Juneau that we need a targeted approach, but that doesn't prevent us from supplementing that targeted approach with other means. The IRGC is an ideological army, a political army. Listing it as a terrorist entity means responding to the nature of the phenomenon, i.e., building on that targeted approach with other means and tackling the phenomenon systematically.