Let me first say that there is a great deal of information on which Mr. Justice O'Connor and ourselves, the government, agreed—a great deal that is public, that we agreed could be made public, including material that would not normally have been made public. Then there's a great deal of information that was not made public that Mr. Justice O'Connor agreed should not be made public because of potential damage to national security. In between those two, there was a very small amount of information that we believed was injurious to national security, but—I don't like to speak for Mr. Justice O'Connor, but I think he would put it thus—that he felt the public interest outweighed.
I think that is before the courts right now, so I can't really comment further than this. But just to be clear, on the vast bulk of the information, both what went public and what didn't go public, Mr. Justice O'Connor and the government agreed on whether it was public or not. We're talking about a very small amount on which there was not agreement.