Actually, let me correct you.
We didn't reject an offer of negotiating a free trade agreement with China. What we have said is that for the time being there are a number of other avenues that we have to deepen our economic engagement with China, which allows me to raise that final milestone that I didn't get a chance to raise earlier. And that is ten-year multiple entry visas, which will make it so much easier for Canadian business people to do business in China. Because you'll be able to get a multiple entry visa, you can use it again and again for periods up to six months over a ten-year period or for as long as your passport is effective.
We believe there are many different ways of engaging with China.
I also note that Australia is, of course, in some ways unique because Australia's largest trade partner is actually China. Canada's largest trade partner is the United States, by far. Just to give you a comparison, our bilateral trade with China is somewhere in the order of $80 billion a year. Our bilateral trade, if you include services, with the United States is somewhere in the order of $800 billion a year. We have a trade agreement with our largest trade partner. They will always be our largest trade partner and we are not forgetting about them. But we have said that we want to diversify Canada's trade all around the world, we want to diversify our markets all around the world, so that Canadian companies can be successful wherever they look to do business.