Being an effective donor in coordination with other donors to promote groups that are working on the issues, as you said, is, of course, a must. Coordinating with other governments on sanctions to keep the sanction regimes that still exist in place, is a must. Our biggest beef, our biggest complaint with the United States government and the European Union, is that they relaxed and eased the sanctions regime too quickly and without getting enough from the Government of Burma.
Because of the complexity of what I have said about the government not being monolithic, it gets a little bit more complicated when you talk about sanctions on the Government of Burma today. You now have to talk about sanctions on the military and military structures, and people identified by the U.S. Department of Treasury and other entities as people who stand in the way of the promotion of human rights and all that. You need to talk about sanctions in a much more targeted way now than ever before, because now you have two sides of the government. You don't want the sanctions to hurt Aung San Suu Kyi and NLD in their efforts to fix the country, but you do want the sanctions to remain a stick hanging over the head of the military, so it still has an incentive to allow reforms to continue.