One of your strategic objectives in your cybersecurity policy is international co-operation, and since the attacks of 2007 certain things happened. One was that NATO undertook their own review. I also believe the U.S. government has people there to help protect against cyber-attacks.
However, when we talk about international co-operation—I'm specifically talking about your objective, which I think is a very noble objective—in many cases the countries that are predisposed to creating attacks may not be democratic and may not have the democratic principles that we enjoy. How do you navigate that?
You talked about the European Union—which is fine, since the countries are democratic—but when it comes to international co-operation, a lot of the attacks that will emanate against certain sovereign states will not be from countries that are democratic or stable.
How do you approach that issue when a part of your founding principles in your cybersecurity document is international co-operation?