Thank you, Mr. Chair.
And please allow me to be blunt, Minister Baird. With all due respect, I believe that the position you have taken and that is embodied in Bill C-6 is a morally ambiguous position.
I found you to be very eloquent last Friday when you spoke in the House of Commons, when you were asked about these, and I found you to be eloquent in the first half of your speech today when you talked about the effects of cluster munitions and about why they're so horrific.
And why are they so horrific? Let me add my voice to this, because everybody has said it. It's because they kill innocent civilians for decades after they are deployed. You are clearly very aware of it.
The reason I am disappointed with your speech today—and I'm referring to the second part of the speech—is that you have provided a loophole. You have not shown Canada taking a position of leadership on this issue. You have invoked the fact that it is important for us to work with our allies and that Canada's safety would be jeopardized if we were to remove that interoperability clause.
I don't buy that for one second. Cluster munitions are one of an array of tactical weapons used in the battlefield. They are not the only weapon that is available for conflicts. As such, I don't believe the safety of Canada in joint operations that we might participate in offshore with our allies requires their use.
I would like to propose an amendment to you. That amendment would be that, although Canada continues, of course, to be a very strong ally of the United States and other countries, some of which may not have ratified the convention, if we are going to become involved in a conflict along with some of our allies who may still have arsenals of cluster weapons, we make our participation with them conditional by saying yes, we will participate, but only if you undertake not to use cluster weapons in those joint operations.
Is this something you would be prepared to consider?