Thank you very much.
Thank you very much for appearing before us.
Mr. Fraser, I used the analogy last week of the real-life circumstance in Korea. Of course, I believe in that immediate theatre there were Australian troops as well as New Zealand troops, but it was in the Kapyong region. It was Colonel Stone with the Princess Patricias who was at the verge of being overrun by thousands of Chinese at the position he was in. The position got so untenable that he literally called down an artillery strike on his own position.
Under a scenario like that I could quite well imagine that given the circumstances, he'd be more than prepared to take anything from air or artillery that was available under those circumstances.
That's one concern that I have when we have our military being involved on what I call the front lines more and more, whether it's in Afghanistan or in Korea, not having that option of emergency to be able to deal with the circumstance. It's limiting the lives and health not only of our soldiers but also in that area of the American soldiers as well, too.
I'm not sure, as Mr. Garneau had said earlier, that the Americans would want to be hamstrung in that particular scenario by having a partner there that was going to make things conditional when you're in an emergency circumstance. Certainly any effective command in any region cannot have confusion or hesitancy happening.
But more so than anything, I'm looking at this article 21 as being more party state definitions than it is individual definitions, where clause 11 is certainly personal protection for that individual. Then I refer back to that scenario, that real-life scenario. He who called in that artillery strike was not at high command. The high command would be at the general position. This was a colonel. It may very well be a sergeant calling in that air drop or that artillery support.
Canadian soldiers, as well as many professional army soldiers, are taught to be independent thinkers and to act when the circumstances demand that they act professionally and immediately. So it's easy to say that on high the parties have come to an agreement, but I really feel you need this individual protection for the men and women who are actually there on the front lines. What is your opinion on that, Mr. Fraser?