You asked how, in terms of the conflict, we measure success there. Number one, very simply, is that you measure how many artillery shells are flying across from the occupied territories into Ukraine. You measure the number on a daily basis. The OSCE does so, and they issue a daily report. You can see where the artillery shells are coming from. Let's not say, then, that both sides have to agree. It's very clear where the artillery shells are coming from and bombing villages. That's number one: we need to see that come to an end.
We also need to see an end to human rights abuses. We should be monitoring the number of human rights abuses in the occupied territories, in Crimea, and frankly in Russia itself. We see political opponents being executed. We're seeing journalists in Crimea being basically subjected to investigation and shutdown. That's another metric: what is Russia doing in terms of being an honest citizen and not abusing human rights of its own citizens or in the occupied territories?
It's important for us to call things by their actual names and not continue to turn it into some sort of “this is a conflict”. This is not a conflict. It's a war by Russia against Ukraine.
In terms of Ukraine, I think we can see a lot of progress. You could say...and in fact the last U.S. ambassador as he was leaving Ukraine said that he had seen more reforms in the country in the last two and a half years than he had in 25 years, and that Ukraine is going in that right direction.
We don't have to monitor elections anymore—