As the minister said, we have been backstopping what the British have been doing. They have kind of a four-part plan that tries to disrupt the drug trade by targeting the traffickers and then strengthening rural livelihoods. CIDA does a lot of work on sustainable livelihoods, and that's meant to do that. We try to reduce on the demand side, and we look at further developing state institutions there that are vital for the counter-narcotics strategy.
The minister referred earlier to some police training. In fact, some of the police training is meant to help in that effort on counter-narcotics as well, both in Pakistan and in Afghanistan.