We're not sitting on the sidelines. We have, as Chuck said, some of the best negotiators in the field. They are actively looking after Canada's interest to the maximum degree possible.
At the end of this negotiation, there will be a broad-based consensus of countries, and it will be a balanced package, and we will have influenced it in various places.
If we are not actually into give-and-take in some areas, as we aren't with supply management, then we lose that degree of freedom, that element of bargaining opportunity. We will then have to assess the overall package that the broad majority of countries will accept. Then we will be faced with a decision of whether we stay in or get out.
Is that a fair statement, Mr. Gero?