It's not in our interest to do so. We will then, as I've suggested, really be leaving the ground to our enemies, our adversaries, our competitors, who will fill the void. We're already seeing that: The Americans are experiencing that because they were pulling back.
As I've suggested, when it comes to promoting democracy and human rights, one of the principal avenues for doing that has been through peacekeeping—through peacebuilding missions in which Canada helped to write the resolutions, the enabling resolutions. Put people in the field to do those jobs. Those missions, by the way, create an enormous space for our civil society actors, who are much more important in some ways than what our officials do, because they're on the ground. They're promoting democracy. They're promoting human rights.
If you're not there, it's goodbye, and it goes well beyond that to the technology frontier, as I've suggested, where those international organizations that I mentioned play a key standard-setting role. We have to be there.