To begin, I think you're absolutely right that NATO has keen interests in the South Asia situation, and also in the Middle East. I'm saying I don't think that NATO is the institutional context within which those issues are pursued. In the case of Iran, it's P5 plus 1. So that involves China and Russia as well as European countries and a NATO country.
It's a particularly difficult thing, but I think that generally the solution to the Iran problem is known. There needs to be a cap, an end, a termination of Iran's enriching of uranium to 20% and a recognition of Iran's right to continue to enrich uranium to 3% to 5% for nuclear reactors. And the international community should supply fuel rods for Iran's research reactor that uses the 20% uranium.
That's largely the formula for a solution there. It doesn't mean that Iran is going to accept it, but I think the international community has made a big mistake in insisting all along that Iran suspend all enrichment. Its response, of course justifiably, is that it's entitled to do it under the nuclear non-proliferation treaty.