As I said earlier, this is an enforceable contract, so if they cancelled it we would face litigation from Boeing. I can't tell you what the outcome would be, but this is an enforceable contract, and hence it could cost us a lot of money, for sure, most definitely.
That's number one, and number two is we'd need to go back to the drawing board in terms of providing our armed forces with the type of airlift they require, which is really also almost as important as the financial consequences, when you think about it. They've been deprived of these assets for too long. When we formed the government, we faced the situation that basically the Liberals had, for reasons of their own--I'm not quite sure what they were--decided not to equip the military as they should, particularly given the theatre they're in right now in Afghanistan. They actually sent them to Afghanistan.
Hence we're stuck having to equip the military. And I think we've gone about it the right way in the first phase of our C-17s, and I think our military are happy at the type of acquisition we've made. So if we were to cancel this, there would be financial consequences and there would be dire consequences, I think, also in Afghanistan and elsewhere where our forces serve.