It's part of a bigger problem than just Canada's. As I said, the Taliban and other bandit groups have access to all these old Soviet weapons, many of which have been accumulated and destroyed. But particularly in our area, the Pashtun tribe spreads across into Pakistan, and the Taliban, not exclusively but essentially, comes out of the Pashtun.
These tribal people move back and forth across the mountains. The Pakistan military has been trying to do the best they can. They have 80,000 soldiers in the mountains in the territories opposite Afghanistan trying to stop the flow back and forth. They haven't been totally successful; there is a flow back and forth.
In fact, sometimes when the activity increases in our area, it's because the Pakistanis have actually succeeded in closing the routes, and therefore the Taliban have to stay in. What they do in the winter time is move back into Pakistan to rest. One of our big challenges is to coordinate the efforts between Pakistan and Afghanistan to try to cut the flow of the Taliban and cut the flow of weapons. That's the bigger picture.
Because we as Canadians have a more limited responsibility, we don't get into that. That would be a larger NATO task.