In that vein, I used to sit on the national defence committee. I was parliamentary secretary to the Minister of Veterans Affairs and associate minister of national defence. I have a son who's an intelligence officer with the Canadian Armed Forces. I've been to NORAD's Cheyenne Mountain. I have been to NORAD North. I have received various intelligence briefings, and I fully understand the importance of understanding that we're getting little parts of it. We will not get the full picture, especially if we do not have the necessary clearance.
In that regard, you're asking that politicians learn more about, and understand, intelligence. If the offer is there for leaders of political parties to receive the necessary clearance, to receive these intelligence briefings, and to see for themselves the information that the rapporteur was able to glean from his two-month investigation, would you not recommend that all politicians who are offered this kind of briefing avail themselves of it?