Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Thank you, gentlemen, for appearing here today.
I want to make a comment.
I'm appalled at the monumental Liberal mismanagement that put our government into a position like this by putting five times the amount of funding into a virtually private company and not having these types of arrangements thought out beforehand.
Another political question of note is the connection of Marc Garneau, who was there during the time, the Liberal candidate, I believe, and his silence on this. Somebody in the industry surely would have picked up on the vulnerability of this at that time. How much has his silence affected this to bring it to this stage today and then drop it on the table for our government of today to deal with?
The second part of this is that Canada certainly must assert itself in its Arctic territorial claims or weaken its position internationally. Of course our government is doing a lot on this now, as you said, Mr. Leblanc. They've been putting in ports, aircraft, and sea patrols. They're doing a lot on it.
My question is, even with a bilateral agreement with American ownership of this equipment for the imagery facilities, if it's American-owned and only sometimes requested by Canada, whose sovereignty is really being reinforced overall with Radarsat scans of the Arctic waterways in the higher Arctic? Is America's being reinforced, or is Canada's? Is it reinforcing internationally?
After all, if the equipment isn't owned by Canada, is only used part-time by Canada, if it's mostly owned by the United States and used most of the time by the United States, and with the United States having a disagreement on Arctic sovereignty itself, whose sovereignty would be reinforced if we used it part-time from the United States? Is that not a concern?
Could you respond, Mr. Leblanc, or Mr. Byers?