Thank you, Deputy and Ambassador, for being here. You're both consummate public servants.
I, for one, Deputy, am very glad you're not deputy minister of labour or trade, and I'm very glad you're deputy minister for foreign affairs.
It's very clear in the Indo-Pacific policy that we refer to China as an increasingly disruptive global power. You have used the expression, “eyes wide open”, and I'd like to pick your brain a little bit about defensive and offensive.
We have coercive diplomacy, we have arbitrary detention, we have foreign interference and we also have huge opportunities that could cost Canadians opportunities if we don't address how we engage with them.
How do you balance the defensive with the disruptive power and the offensive, and it includes also the very offensive with the human rights agenda we carry, but also the opportunities that we have?