What we would want to make clear, first of all, is that supply management is not being negotiated at the WTO. What is being negotiated is market access. I don't think it is a matter of one sector winning and one sector losing. It isn't about the exporters winning and our domestic marketing systems losing. I think it's about an overall good deal for Canada. We're not asking to play one off against the other, but what we are asking for is for Canada to stick to the commitment it already made in 2001, when it signed onto the Doha mandate, and again in 2004 when it signed onto the framework, in which it said that it agreed to give substantial market access on all products, including sensitive products.
I don't think that CAFTA or its members, as exporters, farmers, processors, are asking that supply management be gone. We clearly understand that supply management is a very important part of the agriculture sector in the country, but what we are saying is that Canada needs to stick to what it has already said it was going to do, because if it doesn't... the problem is our sensitive products, like grain and wheat, won't be exported.