That's fair enough.
I'll tell you why I ask. We don't engage with North Korea, we don't engage with Iran—in fact, we are embargoing Iran—and we don't engage with the Yanukovych government of Ukraine, because those countries don't conform to normative standards on the international stage. This is for various reasons. I'm not comparing them exactly. When countries don't behave in civilized ways, when they do not conform to basic behaviour that we expect of countries, we generally don't reward those countries with preferential trade terms.
Now, contrary to Mr. O'Toole's characterization of the record I gave as Google facts, the list of facts that we've raised is as long as my arm and from reputable sources of every type, showing that the situation in Honduras is simply appalling when measured by a human rights and democratic standard. It's not just civil society; the government itself is participating in these democratic and human rights violations. So I'm just asking....
You could make the argument that we should engage with every country in the world because that's the way to improve things. But that's not the way we conduct our foreign policy. We don't say that we should bargain a trade agreement with Iran because it's only by engaging them that things will improve.
I'm just wondering how this fits in terms of Honduras. Have you had any of those discussions or thoughts?