It is difficult for us to respond to cases of soldiers coming back. We don't have access, nor should we have access, to their medical documents to determine what has occurred. Those situations are best addressed by the medical world, which can investigate and determine where help is and what can be provided.
We're much better now at dealing with reservists who have deployed overseas, in part because there are greater numbers. We've learned through our mistakes in the past. Looking back at Bosnia, some of the reservists who came back from the Second Battalion of Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry in the Medak pocket got off the plane and went home, never to be seen again. We don't do that any more. We have procedures for follow-up. It's not perfect, but we try to learn from our mistakes, and we try to make sure that nobody falls through the cracks.