Turkey is undertaking a revisionist and hegemonic foreign policy which, at some times, coincides with our interests and NATO's interests, but, at other times, does the opposite. Turkey does not ask NATO or Canada to tell it what policy to follow, as Libya does, for example. So our interests sometimes coincide and sometimes do not coincide, almost at random.
So that must be considered. Turkey often acts in a much more sovereign and unilateral fashion than most other NATO member countries. We see that in our Department of Foreign Affairs, since, for a number of years, Turkey has been the object of many more specific investigations about arms export permits than other NATO members.
The points you are raising, therefore, are already considered by the minister and his officials when it comes to issuing permits.