I think the issue is that because these ownership restrictions are in place, it does limit our ability to continue to grow Telesat. I've said that I think we have reasonable good scale in providing a service here in North America. We have eight, almost nine satellites that are really dedicated to serving North America. But what we don't have are orbital positions that allow us to expand our overseas business adequately.
In Canada, for instance, we've lost business for DND. Defence needs access to capacity to serve overseas markets. We would like to be able to add orbital positions and launch new satellites that are capable of serving some of these overseas markets. I'm thinking in particular, for instance, about Afghanistan. We had—and we have—good coverage of Iraq with our existing satellite fleet, but guess what, most of the government's and the allied governments' interest has shifted from the Iraqi theatre to Afghanistan. We don't have an orbital position that has good coverage there. As a result, we're just not well positioned to even capture some of the Canadian requirements that would serve that market. So I'd say that is an example, and there are others as well.