I think you have certainly characterized the situation very well in terms of the developing countries' desire to maintain a degree of protection to their nascent farming industry to a large extent, and the overall Doha Round is premised on the notion that the outcome should provide special and differential treatment to developing countries. According to the proposal on the table, developing countries will be entitled to safeguard a certain amount of their agricultural sector from taking on any market access commitment.
In terms of the developed countries, the position that Canada is taking is still a bit at odds with where the others are. Most other developed countries have accepted the principle of making some concessions, including in their sensitive products. We feel, however, that Canada should be recognized specifically in that regard simply because some other countries, including the developed countries, are also seeking some exceptions elsewhere. For instance, the Americans would like to have special treatment in certain areas of interest to them, such as cotton production.
If the negotiations have to arrive at a point where each other's trade interests will be protected, for us, the fact that we have maintained a very hard-line position on supply management is a pretty powerful signal that, for Canada, that's what matters most and therefore some accommodation should be found to respect that position.