My concern is that if you take a state like Iran, right now, following their elections and the leadership of the uprising--as they call it--they're using the drug laws to destroy those young people now. They're hanging one every eight hours. So the language of who is doing what in our courts is wonderful and truly important, but on the ground there's a huge risk factor when you're dealing with people such as these who are prepared to do anything and everything.
Libya today is an example, when you watch the airplanes on television bombing and strafing their own citizens. You realize you're dealing with a leader--I don't even want to call him a leader--of people in control of a country that will destroy their own citizenry. So again these are the kinds of major players around the world that cause that kind of concern. Your own point was about getting rid of the victims so there's no evidence. Those things are very concerning.
I agree with you that we have to bring this and continue, because the momentum has already started. This country was reluctant to sign on to the torture agreement ourselves. It took us an embarrassingly long time to do that. But the momentum is there, and I agree we have to do it.
I have no further questions, Mr. Chair.