If I could, I want to amplify what Greg commented on. Typically people see the capability of the Canadian Forces through the ships, the troops, or the planes that are being operated. But there's an under-appreciation of everything that's behind that: the command and control, surveillance, logistics, transportation and the like, the back office functions. Those are the things that are typically in high demand in a complex emergency response. While we may not provide thousands of soldiers or dozens of ships and planes, we're really good at providing the ability to communicate, providing headquarters locations, surveillance of all types, and enabling through logistics, getting to places that are hard to get to and sustaining them. We can see that as a very valuable contribution of the Canadian Forces to mission partners who are in the lead.
On our coasts, the problems our coastal joint task force commanders rehearse with our agency partners are typically led by what those inter-agency partners see as their biggest challenge. On the east coast, maritime security and the challenges of threats coming ashore are the focus areas. On the west coast it's being prepared to deal with natural disasters.