Clearly, everyone would prefer to have guaranteed contracts. I think that is normal.
Having said that, as regards the CH-47 and the C-130J,
CAE competed. The Government of Canada put out an SOIQ, a solicitation of interest and qualification. We qualified with our Canadian partners across the country. We won that competition. Then we negotiated a contract with the Canadian government that was a fair contract. We won the contract for the CH-47. We won the contract for the C-130J, and Lockheed Martin, after, again, hard negotiations and looking at different things...we won the contract for maintenance technicians on the C-130J.
This is the name of the game. This is a democratic country, we live in a relatively democratic world, and we are okay with competition because we believe, as a world leader, that we can get the best.
I will add one thing. We do a lot of work for the U.S. Special Forces in the States. The U.S. Special Forces, for those who will remember, are...that movie Black Hawk Down. They only buy the best, and we're their biggest supplier. I guess that means something for the quality of the work that is done by the employees of CAE.
So we're open to competition.