Thank you.
Just to begin, with regard to interoperability for Canada, everything we do is designed to make us interoperable with our allies, because we know we're not going to be doing stuff alone in any sort of expeditionary setting, so it is very inherent in the training and the exercising or the procurement or the equipment that we have.
In terms of things like treaties and other treaty arrangements, when we went into the negotiations on the cluster munitions convention, NATO allies spoke about this and caucused. In fact, I think it is article 21—I may be wrong—of the cluster munitions treaty that actually gives us the ability to maintain the interoperability, because it's extremely important to be able to have that in the spirit of the treaty itself.
As I say, the treaty itself has article 21, which was designed for that purpose. We have been able to find a compatibility between being able to get into a position to ratify the cluster munitions treaty and maintaining our ability to have interoperability.