I think that the UN certainly needs additional resources. That's obviously something that would have to be agreed multilaterally and at the UN itself. I think if you would ask many of those who work on it, from their perspective they acknowledge very much that they are heavily under-resourced.
From a national perspective, countries like Canada, and indeed a number of European countries, take this role as well, as do countries like Australia. They are active in facilitating this kind of monitoring that I was talking about. They are sharing information, as well, where possible.
Again, it's acknowledging potential limitations in information sharing between countries, but to the extent possible, they do that in the North Korea case. That helps go some way to addressing the under-resourcing issue that exists on a very large scale for the sanctions regime. Again, I think this is a place where Canada can potentially contribute expertise and its own resources at home in a way that is useful.