In fact, I was going to say, having done the Egyptian evacuation mandated by the Prime Minister and having sent half of my staff to Libya to do the evacuation of Canadians from Libya, I can tell you that I agree entirely. This is something that we have to have the capability to do. There have been a lot of lessons learned from the experiences in both Egypt and Libya, and we've managed to come out of it unscathed, but in terms of the effectiveness of how we did it, I have some solid questions. I will let the government respond to those.
You've covered a very wide waterfront. I think one of the big issues is, first of all, that the internal security of Canada in the broad defence and security sense is definitely through the defence perimeter with the United States. That's no question, and I think it remains a fundamental priority.
However, Canada cannot afford not to have what we refer to as an expeditionary capability. That's where some of the choices have to be made. For instance, we've been reasonably successful after the events in the Philippines with DART and all of that, but there are greater capabilities that have to be built around that.
As well, today peacekeeping has become increasingly somewhat of an older concept as opposed to peace-building—