Even within those agencies, from my experience in working with them when I was in government and even subsequently, there's not always enough capacity. You don't make China experts overnight. It requires language skills, cultural understanding, understanding China, long postings, building up the skill set, giving them promotional avenues. You don't move people around on a chessboard. We're never going to be equal to the U.S. I've met with the CFIUS group and lectured to them in the United States. They have much more capacity, and fortunately, we have access to that.
I'd say this: Identify risk and go for that rather than a shotgun approach. If and when China appears, it may be risky or it may not be risky, and that's a key determination to make.