Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you for the presentations. I appreciate that my colleagues around the table have asked you a number of questions that are all relevant and important. We all want to make certain that the process is proper and secure and that it captures the essence of trying to also build our homegrown talent, enable some of our own suppliers to succeed in the process and provide some sovereignty and protection of Canadian defence measures, including the patents and initiatives that we hold dear. I appreciate the concern that we foster that process.
Mr. Page, you mentioned that we haven't made a decision as of yet. We're still going through that procedure to determine it and to ensure that it's being done. Today I had a meeting with a former brigadier-general who flew these aircraft. He flew for us during his day. He mentioned how critically important it is for us to ensure that the process is done appropriately to have the benefit of having the right aircraft necessary to go forward, and that it is proven, and not necessarily at a concept stage, that in the Arctic and so forth it is able to perform well. He mentioned that this is a long process. It's not something you do quickly.
You have reaffirmed that in your discussions. Can you elaborate a little bit further in terms of that integrity? What are the preferences in your process relative to our homegrown talent—it doesn't include just one supplier, but the many that we have—and then the proven capability by which to proceed forward? I guess I'm trying to reintroduce, or advise this committee on, the difference between the RFP and the RFI enabling this and why it takes so long.
I don't know which of you, Mr. Page or Mr. Matthews, wishes to proceed here.