It's not pretty. What you've described is the moment we have been predicting and analyzing for some time, the so-called polycrisis when multiple events—wars, instability and challenge to international law—are happening simultaneously, and it's extraordinarily complicated to navigate.
You speak about the fact that the attention of the world has shifted, and I can attest to that being the case, certainly by way of mainstream media. I spent quite a bit of time over the last week with a number of colleagues and with ministers at the United Nations General Assembly. It was a high-level week. I can confirm that the conflict in the Middle East is much more present on everybody's lips.
Having said that, as someone from a department that looks at the entire world, I can say in all humility that we can think and chew gum at the same time, and our attention is not divided. It is equally on both conflicts, and more, but also on the pursuit of Canada's interests in all of this. We are able to focus on the events in the Middle East and provide policy advice and financial support, but as I said, to date the support of the Government of Canada is nearing $20 billion to Ukraine, and that's not just stuff that happened two years ago. It's been wave after wave. We have to have this ability to call out abuses whenever we see them.