The Koreans are tough negotiators. They've been tough negotiators with the U.S. and Europe and everyone else. Just because they're tough negotiators doesn't mean it isn't possible to get a good deal. I think it would be premature to walk away at this point and move to another market.
We're facing a couple of challenges. We are a fairly small market. Canada represents about 3% of the world's GDP. There's so much bilateral and regional work going on that every country is struggling to find people with the experience and expertise to negotiate these things. It's a problem we face with India. They have their list of who they want to negotiate with, and we aren't high enough on the list to be able to warrant the use of those scarce resources.
In many of these cases, it's incumbent on us to be aggressive in trying to pursue these deals. We're doing this with Europe, where we are more the demander. We're the ones encouraging Europe to come to the table.
That's just the nature of the environment. But it doesn't mean that we just go get a deal, that anything we can sign is a good deal. That's not the case at all, and that was the point I was trying to make.