Again, the first thing I would do would be to work within the parliaments of the different countries together in order to make that possible and to have a foot on the ground in order to know what is going on first-hand, because we're not only in a war here. The blockade is an act of war, but we're also in a war of information. Armenians have been losing that war of information for so long. Part of the reason is that the lack of information is critical, and in terms of international organizations, nobody is there except for the Red Cross. Nobody is seeing what is going on in Artsakh.
As I said, even the Armenian-Azerbaijan ceasefire, in place since 1994, was never monitored. There was never consistent, periodic information regularly on who was disrupting the ceasefire and sanctions for doing that. That would be a big plus.