days ago, the you know, unanimous 15 to 0 u.n. vote on slapping these sanctions on north korea. it was a rare time where you had the u.s., russia, and china on the same page. this would come down to about a third of the north korean exports, which translates to roughly $1 billion. the question, and correct me, john, but it's really on whether or not china actually enforces this. >> that is a crucial element, brooke, but the other piece of it is, what is the goal for these kind of measures? if it's the idea of, to stem the flow of funds into north korea's nuclear and ballistic missile programs, i would argue the train has already left the station. in the second half of the 2000s, the north koreans made a lot of money from the coal trade and from that, i think you see the funds that they're using to finance this kind of procurement. >> i think someone may still be in my ear. john, i apologize for that. john park, thank you so much. we're waiting for the state department briefing, and we're