Let me see if I understand your question.
It is absolutely correct, I think--it's what I heard the minister say--that instead of getting a guarantee, we're opening ourselves up for the potential, and the potential can be the potential to bid on $12 billion. When you bid on $12 billion, you might win 10%, 20%, 30%, 40%, 50%. If you go historically by what we've done, it could be in the 30% to 40%. And I should tell you that even when I was there, we estimated that the final contractual amount available to industry might be in the $4-billion to $6-billion range, which would be phenomenal, given the little amount we've put in.
So I think it is absolutely, absolutely correct, and there's nothing in this 2006 MOU that prevents us from continuing to reap those benefits. Having said that, as I've said, there is a risk that if you decide not to buy them, then the companies that have contracts are in a higher jeopardy position. Of course I'm not advocating not buying them, and neither am I advocating getting out of the contract; I'm simply advocating doing a competition.
Frankly, if the government thought it was at risk, it could have made the sole-source decision December 12, 2006. Why wait till now to make that commitment? There's nothing between now and then that makes any difference. Even better, on December 12, 2006, launch a competition, which would have had the results right today, in which case we might have been able to make the commitment following a competition.