Why? It's hard for me to say.
I would say that in general Canada does not do enough on the national security front. I think that's true in general on multiple threats that we face today. It's definitely true on the issue of Iran and the IRGC, as I think I emphatically said in my presentation.
To me, my whole point is that the best and most effective way to counter IRGC activities here, including the ones you described, as well as multiple others—I would really emphasize the transnational repression aspect against dissidents and human rights activists here—is through targeted measures and using some of the tools at our disposal. It's very easy to dismiss concerns about scarce resources as despairing, but in the real world, resource constraints are real. They prevent us from doing things that we should be doing. These resource constraints are absolutely severe. Therefore, I think targeted measures would be much more effective.
It's the same thing on the issue of reputation. What hurts our reputation the most is not our failure to list the IRGC; what hurts our reputation the most is the fact that we announce measures and don't actually enforce them. That would be the case with listing the IRGC, realistically.