Yes and no. The fact that they detailed these things or where we're going to invest is important, yes, and it is useful, but this was done in 2017 and 2018. We're now in 2022. The world is a little different now.
The no side of the equation is that too much of it is ambiguous. I understand the reasons that governments prefer ambiguity over specificity. The world can change, and there are other political reasons. When you take, for example, the priority of NORAD modernization [Technical difficulty—Editor] at North American defence modernization, which is even bigger, what does that mean? Well, we have ideas of what it means, but usually it's about the North Warning System and [Technical difficulty—Editor] it's much bigger than that.
Canada faces a lot of significant choices in terms of dealing with or developing effective surveillance tracking and target discrimination capabilities for the aerospace defence of North America and Canada. These go beyond fighters. They include, besides air-to-air refuelling, potentially airborne warning and control aircraft. They also include the potential role that the future surface combatant will play. They also potentially require considerations of ground-based defences for a layered defence of North America, going back in some ways to the 1950s and 1960s. None of this.... This is all open. We don't know what they're planning, and you do need a plan.
The other interesting thing about this, and it reflects the strategic issue for Canada, is that those plans are being drawn up, but they're being drawn up by NORAD. NORAD is the driver behind this—not National Defence in this country and not necessarily DOD in the United States. It's a NORAD thing now, which spills into USNORTHCOM as well.