I'll try to deal with your concern.
I think if both Dean Saunders and Mr. McDorman—Mr. Saunders never having really been involved in the negotiations—had their druthers, they wouldn't have this sovereignty clause in there. But it's there. They seem to feel it's something they'd rather not have, but it's there, and that was the outcome of the negotiation.
The key concern we have is that NAFO currently applies exclusively to the NAFO regulatory area outside 200 miles. It prohibits, de facto, any NAFO involvement within 200 miles. If Canada asked NAFO to do something within 200 miles, it couldn't do it because the NAFO Convention wouldn't allow it. The new amended NAFO Convention would now allow it. It gives a new right to NAFO that does not now exist.
The reality is—