Yes, except that the government has not been forthcoming. Until June 3, this committee had been told repeatedly that the reason the documents weren't forthcoming was that it was a privacy and administrative matter. It was only suddenly, earlier this month, that it became a national security matter.
Given that you've not been forthcoming, why should Parliament, parliamentarians and Canadians be satisfied when you've not fulfilled the obligation to send documents to Parliament for oversight? The government is accountable to Parliament, and ultimately to Canadians through that Parliament. Instead, you've gone to a committee where members, as MP Chong pointed out, don't have the ability to hold the government accountable, as other committees do. No matter how hard they work, no matter their standing as parliamentarians, they simply do not have that ability to hold the government accountable.
It seems to me, and I think a lot of other Canadians, that this route has been chosen because you want to hide what's in those documents. You don't want to be forthcoming about the government's errors, the national security breach and possibly how you put our nation's security at risk.