So if Turkey is going to get struck by Iran because Iran is acting so irrationally, attacking its neighboring countries and the bases within, what is the most significant base in Turkey right now, Incirlik.
If by the same logic that Iran has been following for the past, I don't know, 48 hours, decides to attack Turkey's, decides to attack Incirlik base within Turkey and Turkey retaliates, what's more dangerous than the Iranian Kurds on the Iraqi side is the Azerbaijani Azeris on the northern border of Azerbaijan. Well, I should say northern border of Iran, southern border of Azerbaijan.
The Kurds are deciding whether they're going to mobilize. They're waiting to see if they're going to be armed. Azerbaijan moved its entire armed units to that border and recalled all of its soldiers that were on leave.
Right. They actually canceled any requests for leave as well. Right.
But but how long do you think if we're looking at it from a financial or energy and oil and gas industry, from that perspective, how long do you all see this continuing for without just everything kind of breaking? And they've exhausted all of their security measures, their strategies in terms of, you know, their borders and all that.
I mean, I mean, I would have to imagine that the Iranian borders are are fairly open to the west, to the north in terms of just getting food and just regular trade, more or less. Obviously, inspections, I'm sure, have gotten much more intense and things like that.
But as far as refugees and everything like that, I think that we're not at the point that we can say there's now there has been flows out of Tehran, to be absolutely clear. But in terms of like the outline frontier, if you will, of Iran, I don't think that Iran or any of the surrounding countries, to be quite frank with you, are going to tolerate any kind of refugee overflow unless they're, you know, in some way allowed by the Iranian regime and the incoming country. And I don't see that.