I think the simple and short answer to your question is that everybody owns the democracy file at Global Affairs. It's not something for which we want to create a silo and give entire responsibility. My colleagues who deal with the geographic components of the department all have programs supporting democracy in one way or another in the key fragile states they are investing in. The Middle East is a good example where, through the support the government announced for the Middle East strategy, we are helping to rebuild a stable, unified, pluralistic functioning democracy in Iraq, which is really beset by the challenges of many different ethnic and religious groups.
We have a number of programs, some of which are led by my colleagues in the geographic...and some by my branch, but we all are expected to work together to manage the democracy file. It's too diverse and too vast a portfolio to confine it to a single entity in the department.