There were nine concrete steps. Just so you know, we quite deliberately set it up so that there was a team of American negotiators, Canadian negotiators, all non-government or ex-government people.
Mr. Cellucci came in as the lead American negotiator, and the first thing he said was that he was putting his personal views on the shelf and behaving as if he was negotiating for the United States. He had previously expressed the view that the U.S. should embrace Canada's legal position in the Northwest Passage. That was not his position in the negotiation. He came in as a hard-nosed negotiator.
It's tough. The Americans are tough negotiators. But we were able to actually arrive at some mutually agreeable recommendations. If we could do that in a day and a half, imagine what Gary Doer and his team and the team in Foreign Affairs could do if you gave them six months.