There is a similarity between NAFTA and the Pacific Alliance.
A lot of what you're seeing in the Pacific Alliance was taken from what they learned and what they saw in NAFTA, how successful we were in North America in creating an integration agenda that went beyond the agreement.
For influencing China and agreements around Asia, absolutely. Again, there is another agenda for trade integration on the other side of the Pacific, in Asia, that's coming out of the regional comprehensive economic partnership, RCEP, and other agreements. Creating facts on the ground, creating rules and agreements between countries establishes precedence, while other countries in Asia are establishing precedence for more illiberal trade. So there are two competing agendas going on here, and everything we can do to strengthen one that is progressive, that does have more liberal values, is important in the strategic sense.