As we highlighted previously, again, these incursions, I agree, are egregious and reckless, and that is how the 32 allies have qualified them publicly. They've signalled that through two article 4 consultations and a North Atlantic Council statement, and are in the process of establishing a number of new measures called Eastern Sentry.
As I mentioned earlier, we've seen, in the past, a number of incidents involving critical underwater infrastructure. The alliance did set up a Baltic Sentry, and we've seen a drop from that.
We're still in the early days in the response. The SACEUR has already said that he has the tools and authorities he needs. He just needs some more assets, and allies are providing those. The challenge is that NATO, as an organization, is frankly very much heavy on the conventional side. It does do work on cyber and it does do work on hybrid, but some of the response options in some of those domains are not within NATO's remit.