Well, the first thing I would note is the last point I mentioned in my presentation, which is the need for more transparency at this level. Generally speaking, we are not very good at transparency on the national security foreign policy front, and the same goes for the sanctions side.
I am not in a position to give any numbers to quantify my answer. This is based on research, conversations, interviews and informal parts of my work on a regular basis. I'm also saying this as a former government person.
In a nutshell, whether it's CSIS, the RCMP, CBSA or Global Affairs—which plays a major role now in terms of coordinating these issues on the international trade side of foreign affairs—there is very simply a need for more resources, more human bodies and more money. If you look at OFAC, the Office of Foreign Assets Control, which is the U.S. office that manages sanctions in the U.S., it is gigantic. We are not the U.S. and we never will be, but proportionally we are nowhere close.