There are two basic possibilities for where this can go. The most likely of the two, which is what happens with virtually every single program at this stage, is that the negotiations with the U.S. government.... I should be very clear here, we don't negotiate with Lockheed Martin. We negotiate with the U.S. government, because the way the structure for the joint strike fighter program operates is that the U.S. government operates the program and we negotiate with them the delivery time and cost. Our costs are the same as what the U.S. government would pay, so the U.S. government in some ways acts as an agent in this scenario.
We do not negotiate with Lockheed Martin. That is a pretty critical point.
In this path, the Canadian government will negotiate with the U.S. government. We will then identify when our deliveries and other aspects of the program will start to occur. This should not be a very long process, given that the U.S. government is very tight about what it can offer. It will then start deliveries, or the program will proceed. We'll have a finalized contract.