I'm not going to take issue with the 0.01%, if you're looking at terrorism. I think what has changed is fundamentally the capability of a single individual to perpetrate very significant acts of terrorism against the country.
It's not the number that is critical; it's what's doable. In the 21st century, with the downloading of technology, as I said in the paper I wrote, it is now possible for a single individual to make war on the entire planet with the application of technology for the purposes of leveraging intent.
The issue is not, however, confined to terrorism. There is a second concern, and that is criminals and criminal operations and criminal networks. One of the other things we're seeing in the 21st century is a convergence between criminal organizations and terrorist organizations. So the absolute number is no longer 0.01% but is greater.
Having said that, whether it is less than 1% or not is not the significant variable. The significant variable is whether the threat is potentially greater to Canada as we go forward in time. The answer to that question, sir, is absolutely, yes.