Thank you, Mr. Chair, and thank you to our witnesses for being here today.
I just have a couple of quick questions, and then I'm going to send it down to my colleague, Mr. Carrie.
Mr. Potts, it was talked about the U.S. steel being signed. I just want to reiterate that Colombia has deals with dozens of countries right now, and even though it hasn't been ratified by the U.S., you are correct, the deal has been done and it could be ratified at any time. I think it's a wrong argument to say let's wait until it gets ratified, because that could happen at any time. We realize there are challenges in the U.S. Congress, but we know that is moving forward.
I just want to state as well that Colombia has deals with dozens of countries, and I'm not sure they're waiting just for ours, because they've been out trying to free trade, trying to create other economic abilities for their country, so they don't have to rely so much on the drugs they deal with.
Mr. Westcott, just to your point, my question is more or less in terms of where the U.S. is in terms of what their tariffs are right now going into Colombia. You guys talked about the 20%. Are they competing...? Obviously they are competing there right now. Do they have the same kinds of tariffs?