I'd highlight, as you did, that the ability to have broader opportunities under the Special Economic Measures Act, in particular, to deal with transnational repression is potentially quite helpful.
One of the challenges between the Special Economic Measures Act and the JVCFOA is that the evidence required to list is a bit more specific. Having a broader trigger with respect to transnational repression, as I mentioned, and other topics would allow us greater latitude so that we don't necessarily need to have evidence of a specific individual engaging in a specific human rights abuse, but rather a more general linkage between a problem that is occurring and the individual's contribution to that problem, as we do in other areas. Sanctions against Russian oligarchs are an example of that.
