Thank you very much for that.
I appreciate that there has been a very significant change in posture from the United States, and it will take some time.
This is the last thing I wanted to ask. NATO has long declared that it will defend every square foot of NATO territory. In that defence, I think there has to be an acknowledgement that, for example, if a jet flew over Estonia for some period of time, NATO's ability to respond...because the NATO response jets would not all be stationed at the Estonian border but rather further back from that. It would take extra time to detect the threat and then to respond. If the Russians only came in for 12 minutes and then turned around and fled, NATO may not necessarily do that. However, there are a number of ways—and I think they have been declared—in which we would respond.
On that capability, I think it would be very helpful if you were able to provide us with some insight as to how long it would take to respond. By the way, I think this is somewhat related to the withdrawal from the Ottawa convention, because our NATO allies, particularly on that eastern border with Russia, have become very concerned about slowing down any potential incursion.
I think the time of response is relevant, and perhaps you could provide us with some insight on what the limitations of that might be.