Mr. Chair, first I'd like to talk about Mr. Genuis's motion.
It's important to note that we had submitted Mr. Desjardins‑Siciliano, CEO of Siemens Mobility Canada, as a potential witness, and he declined. I've been wondering these past few days if we should call him again or just leave it be. I must say I'm on the fence about it. Personally, I feel that we've heard enough to hopefully reach a conclusion. Mr. Genuis's motion suggests that we come to the same conclusion. If we've reached a conclusion, I'm not sure we need to hear new witnesses. If the committee is going to recommend that the permit be suspended or revoked, why do we need to continue the study and hear new witnesses?
Perhaps we should consider that first—the German ambassador even brought it up when she appeared before this committee. Now that we know Mr. Putin was bluffing and he clearly doesn't need the turbines, I feel the permit should just be cancelled or revoked to get us out of the awkward situation we're in. If we all agree on that, I don't see the point of inviting new witnesses to look into it any further.
However, as Mr. Genuis said, given that Russia is calling up 500,000 reservists and putting its nuclear forces on alert, we need to get back to our wider study on the conflict in Ukraine as soon as possible. I should mention that that study got caught up in procedural wrangling, something I regret to this day. We must get back to work as soon as we can.
Once again, unless we can agree on a conclusion and the recommendation we'd like to make when the turbine study is done—in which case I don't feel there's any point pursuing that particular study—I believe it's best that we go back to our wider study on the conflict in Ukraine right away.
I know I may be jumping the gun a bit here, but Mr. Genuis put forward another motion that we could easily pass right now, the one condemning the “referendums” in Russian‑occupied parts of Ukraine. I feel we can move fairly quickly on this and reach consensus or some semblance of it among committee members.
In another round, I'll get a chance to bring up some motions we've already passed. I'm thinking specifically of one involving Haiti. Mr. Chair, I know the situation in Haiti has worsened considerably these past few days, and the action taken by this committee is likely somewhat out of step with recent events, so it would probably be a good idea for us to review it.
If I may, I'd also like to come back to a motion we have yet to act on, to at long last invite Canada's ambassador to the United Nations to appear. I concur with Mr. Genuis that this committee must be able to implement the motions it adopts. Immediately following his appointment, I had moved that we hear from him so we could endorse him, and we were never able to do it. So much has happened since then. Many committee members have requested that we hear from him. We haven't yet, and I feel it's just as relevant as ever, Mr. Chair.