I think we're moving in the right direction with the recent change in position by the CITT. Now we'll have a body that's willing to provide some level of scrutiny to national security exceptions and hold the government more accountable in the scope of the national security exception.
That leads back to your trust issue. If there is no scrutiny at the end of the day, if the rules go out the window, if it's the wild west, then it's easy to go down a bad path in the procurement world. We've seen it many times before. Where there is scrutiny, where there is someone watching over the process, and where the bidders impacted by any impropriety have an ability to go to an independent body and say, “Something went wrong here, take a look at this”, that's what drives trust through the process, in my opinion.