I just want to return to Afghanistan, because the minister responded by saying that generally we take into account everything, that we're always reviewing and perfecting ourselves. I think we should not forget that the last 10 years has been an extraordinary period, and that Afghanistan probably has, at some level, flown under the radar screen of Canadians as not being as significant in our collective life as it actually has been.
I'd just be so much happier to know that, in all of this review, there has been a serious internal review about the nature of intelligence collaboration within Afghanistan, both between Canadian agencies—defence intelligence and CSIS for example—and between the Canadian agencies and Afghan agencies, to learn the kinds of lessons about both human rights dimensions and effective sharing, especially when armed conflict overlaps with counter-terrorism. Has there been a sophisticated study of the lessons learned in the 10 years that has fed into this process?