I would just add that I think the integrated approach we're taking in response to the Iraq and Syria conflicts is a very innovative and really important development in the way we conduct our humanitarian and development assistance in particular. We're providing assistance across the whole spectrum of needs: security and stabilization, humanitarian assistance, and development.
One of the major conclusions of the World Humanitarian Summit was that humanitarian and development assistance need to work much more closely hand in hand in order to cover the continuum of needs, from emergency crisis response all the way through to building resilience, and eventually reintegrating or finding durable solutions for affected populations. Those include everything from emergency food assistance all the way through to livelihoods and other kinds of support that affected people will need. For us it's very exciting to have this kind of multi-year funding commitment that allows our humanitarian development and stabilization programming to move ahead hand in hand and to reinforce each other. The joint planning of those types of assistance allows us to do things we haven't been able to do in other contexts.