Well, to be brutal, the barrier to Georgia is article 5 of NATO. Georgia's engaged in one Russian war in circumstances that we felt were rather.... I don't know who to point the blame to on both sides. I happen to know some of the Georgian politicians quite well. There was a little push and shove in both directions. I don't think that, had I been defence minister at the time, I would have been anxious to be looking at going to nuclear war with Russia in the circumstances of the last South Ossetia operation, and I would think that's foremost of mind of anybody looking at Georgia today. That's certainly an issue. Georgia's a wonderful country, and we should certainly try to encourage it, but I think that's a realistic political assessment, and I can't answer the cyber-threshold issue because the attribution problem is so horrendous in the cyber-realm that that's what's worrying me about trying to come to grips with it.
But they're great questions.