I think that's a complicated question and a very long answer.
The short version I would take on this is, no, I think what we have is a problem common to many countries, and certainly one that we have. We have both systemic and cultural issues that keep information from being moved to the places it needs to be efficiently and effectively. I think ministries between themselves are reluctant to share information. Again, that's both systemic and cultural.
I think what we need in the age of information is more information-sharing. The caveat to this is that information has to be protected for the purposes of national interests but also for the purposes of the individuals themselves.
Are we doing this well? No. Are we sharing information well with our allies? No. Are we sharing some information? Yes.
I think, and this is a point we've taken previously, we are particularly burdened by the fact that as a Canadian policy what we have chosen to do is not push our intelligence-gathering forward. Most particularly, we have chosen as a matter of policy—and I'm not going to comment on that—not to have a foreign intelligence service that would leverage and facilitate more information to allow us to make assessments further afield rather than having to try to make assessments once people have landed on the ground.