It's far from my personal expertise, but I would say a couple of things here. One, obviously the removal of most sanctions, as well as the UN terrorist designations and Canadian, U.S. and other terrorist designations, has opened the playing field economically to an extent but not completely. You still have all kinds of obstacles, including that the U.S. still designates Syria as a state sponsor of terrorism, which dates back decades into the Assad regime but remains on the books. We're still talking about a constrained environment.
We should also note, as was mentioned earlier, that rule of law is still very limited. We're in the middle of a transition and a transformation from one regime to a new order. In that environment, I agree that there's plenty of room for, let's say, lack of transparency. This is something that you see Syrian civil society really playing a key role on.
I'll just briefly say on this and on so many other issues that you have a robust role played by a very rich array of Syrian civil society groups who push back on government corruption and push back on all kinds of mistakes and disagreements. This is a reason for hope, I think, moving forward.
