As I said, I think that if you look at the foreign investment promotion and protection agreement, it has to do with existing investment and the guarantee that they will be treated according to international law and the laws of the country. Even if we wanted to try to get out of the foreign investment promotion and protection agreement, I don't think it would affect our national security the way that addressing things like government procurement, which means new relationships and new technologies that are coming in, would. I'm kind of agnostic on that.
What I'm saying is that we should be setting aside excuses that don't really stand up to the importance of our national security, and I'm not seeing any willingness to do that. That willingness would have to come from higher levels, and the silence of the government on issues related to China yields exactly the kind of passivity that you saw from officials last week. That will continue until the government finds the courage to speak to Canadians the way they should.