Well, forewarned is forearmed.
I want to go back to CETA. You talk about it being the gold standard, and I couldn't agree more. It was great to be part of that from day one. It's not a 10-year-old agreement. Negotiations started almost 10 years ago, but the agreement was signed in principle in the fall of 2014. So it's as current as you're going to get.
I do agree with you that it's a gold standard deal, as is the Ukrainian deal, as you also pointed out. However, TPP followed on that as well, and I wonder why the reticence. The other countries in the world that I talked to and continue to deal with, the ambassadors, trade ministers, and agriculture ministers, are looking for some leadership from Canada. When you go to Vietnam, if you're speaking first, I hope you're actually saying, “Let's form a parade; we're ready to lead it.”
Japan is looking to link arms with somebody; they've already ratified it. Australia and New Zealand are well along those lines as well. Vietnam and Malaysia, of course, are countries that need our help to draw them this way as opposed to being taken into the RCEP with China and Russia, and so on. So I'm hopeful that you're going to be that stern when you get there and say, “Let's get this done sooner rather than later.” The outline is there. There's not a lot of work required to make the changes, to make a TPP 2.0.