This is strange to say, but I think I got the right question and the right answer a year and a half ago. What that means is that as we're looking at how we're going to put those fences around certain kinds of Chinese activities, etc., the challenge is that our American friends are demanding regularly that we expand those areas into biomedical work. They're demanding that it is not just dual-use military activity, but that in fact the Chinese projects that we need to be censoring are not just about military dual use but are giving China certain commercial advantages in high-tech sectors.
The attack on Huawei is a lot bigger than national security conventionally defined. It now comes into a peer competitor Chinese organization, and that's one of the places where I think Canada and the United States are going to have to differ if we move forward, and we need that professional discussion. Techno-nationalism is eating us up.