I look at the same scenario in the Pacific Alliance countries. We were involved. I remember being down in Cali with Prime Minister Harper when the Pacific Alliance was having a set of negotiations and how Canada, even though we weren't directly involved, was sitting on the fringe at that point in time and actually having a fair bit of input in what an agreement looked like that Canada could participate in. As you said, I think we've done a lot of that work before.
What it does is set the rules, just as TPP does for Asia. It sets the rules for Central and South America. What does that mean? You talk about just the three or four countries getting market access, but what about Guatemala, El Salvador, Uruguay, Paraguay, and places such as that? Have you even looked at the possibility of that flooding into those markets?