To be honest, it's not going to be easy. I worked as a legal adviser quite a few years ago in Baghdad during the trial of Saddam and the other senior Baathist officials. To put it in layman's terms, from a due process point of view the whole thing was a God-awful mess, and for myriad reasons.
We think that through this initiative in northern Iraq, for various reasons, we can have trials that will meet western due process standards. In Syria, even with the war over, if there is a transition to a liberal democratic form of governance, it will really take some time. There will be a great deal of residual violence, amongst other things. I think criminal justice related specifically to Syria will probably have to happen outside of Syria, at least if it's to meet necessary due process standards. However, with transitional justice mechanisms in truth telling and truth seeking, I think experience shows that these mechanisms can be set up on Syrian territory.