one is the shape of the government that comes into being, but two, the timeline in which it takes to get that government formed. now, this country held elections not too long ago. his party, prime minister maliki's party, won the majority of seats or the bulk of the seats, so he has the right to form that government. but he's got to form a coalition that the u.s. and others want to be more inclusive, more pluralistic, more representative. the u.s. wants that timeline to happen rather quickly. they don't want it to drag on for months as it usually does in iraq. they don't have the time for that because we've seen isis make territorial gains day after day. that's one issue, to try to get that government in place quickly. but the other issue is the power broken that will take place behind closed doors. what can he offer the kurdish community to try to bring them back to the table and to be part of his inclusive government? and then there are questions to do whether or not prime minister