I think in the case of Venezuela, a number of what we would call our traditional friends all have similar problems of access, of doing their normal diplomatic work. The United States, for example, has chargé-level representation in Caracas. The United Kingdom, some of the other countries that we work well with, all find it a difficult and challenging environment, so we tend to work together for common objectives, certainly in terms of information sharing and such, because different tiers of countries have access to that government based on their orientation and ideology.
Canada certainly is not part of the inner circle. We take strong positions. We defend Canadian values. We support the human rights defenders, and as such, it creates a significant gap with the host government.
That being said, we do have other interests in Venezuela. I was looking at our trade figures. It's a very important export market for western Canadian agricultural products. It's RIM's biggest market in South America. It's a very prosperous country which buys 90% of its goods, and 90% of its revenue comes from oil. There is a commercial relationship that's important, but we find things get complicated at the political, civil society level.