Yes. I actually wrote a piece on that last August in The Globe and Mail. This is an interesting antidote to Chavez, to a certain extent. What I have said is—and it is not private inside information—Raul Castro is an admirer of China and Vietnam, and actually convinced his brother to go along, saying, “Look at what you can do economically; this is where the world is moving.” Supposedly when they got back, he tried to push his brother to do something, with Fidel saying, “Democracy is the stepsister of economic globalization. That is not something that I really want.”
Raul has made a number of statements in meetings recently that, not just economically but politically, there needs to be more room for different opinions. I'm not going to say it is a full-scale clarion call for pluralism and the like, but he is saying things you would not have heard before.
So that's where I think he wants to go. Now, he is 75. How long will he hold on, and what will happen in the transition? We'll wait and see. Clearly, when Fidel dies, I think Raul will stay in power. Once he gets his power consolidated, which he may have done by now, I think that's where he wants to go. What will happen five years down the road? We'll wait and see. That's another area, theoretically, we're—