I understand. I think the way that I would best answer that is to say that the strategic partnership, the outcome documents, from the Prime Minister's visit are actually quite unusual. They're quite explicit. They're quite long. It's not for every visit that the Prime Minister makes or every engagement we have with China that we're that explicit.
Those documents speak to a number of.... I wouldn't frame them as “conditions” but as a number of interests Canada had. One of them I would highlight is—as we are discussing with them the modalities of implementing, of re-implementing, what had previously existed but had been broken—a regular table to raise issues of security and law enforcement. That's important, because if we're going to advance a relationship between Canada and China, be it economic, be it people to people, we also have to have regular access at the most senior levels to talk about some of the challenges you've just raised.
