Well, I can't comment on what's going on inside Global Affairs, but just on what's been said publicly. The minister was clear when he cancelled the permits that he would work with his Turkish counterparts to come to a better understanding so that the assurances regarding the end use of the technology would be upheld.
In a real world sense, though, you can send a product to a country, and in good faith, that country will say that the product will only be used for certain circumstances, and then five years later the situation changes, or you get a change in leadership of the country, and you find that Canadian technology is being used in a war that no one would have anticipated.
It's a difficult task, but to your question specifically, from what I understand publicly and from Mr. Christie's testimony to your committee, work is being done. Certainly, the diplomats at the ground level are working hard to make sure that this issue doesn't completely cause the whole Canada-Turkey relationship to go off the rails.