If we're looking for a process, the identification of a threat has to be central. Once again, on something that Richard said, the manner in which we look for platforms is also part of the problem. That gives further temptation of the politicization.
What we need to understand is that when we talk about the replacement for the F-18s, we're talking about providing for Canadian security in an increasingly dangerous aerospace environment. I think that you have an educational process. This is not about making jobs. This is about giving security, and that has to be something that is constantly rammed home, again and again.
The second process is, of course—and we saw this, to a certain degree, with the creation of the shipbuilding strategy, which we'll talk about in the next hour—that you create independent capability of your experts. Basically, you have the politicians' promise that we set the parameters of what you have to do, come back and tell us, and make sure that what they tell is of course shared publicly, so that there is no suspicion in terms of “the fix is in” on it.
Once you have that decided upon, and once you make the decision on the platform that you are buying, you take a lesson from what the Finns have done and what the Danes have done, and that is to simply say, “Okay, we will now let out air force go and negotiate with the Americans”, or whomever you are negotiating with. You have to have the product. It has to come back, and it has to present into the Canadian security.
If you educate, if you set up the rules of the game and if you have openness in terms of the processes that do not have to be kept secret for security reasons, then you can have a very depoliticized process.