The impact of the global financial crisis has really been a topic of discussion around the NATO table, for the reasons you say, and the U.S. and the U.K. in particular, but there is no country that hasn't been untouched. If you look at what Poland is going through, or France or Germany, every country is trying to figure out how to deliver the same sort of impact but in a different way. That's why one of Canada's priorities has been for NATO to take a really hard look at the way we do our capability development and the way we spend NATO resources, basically to do the sort of bottom-up reviews as an organization that Canadian government departments have been doing. In the context of our own fiscal situation, it is a lot better than others. We're in an interesting position of being one of the few countries that is continuing to invest in its defence budget and not just simply slashing. We're just trying to do things a bit differently.
About NATO's willingness to engage, will the defence budgets have an impact on that? I think we're always selective about how we engage. At the end of the day, it's going to come down to the nature of the security challenge and whether countries are going to be willing to put in what they need to meet that security challenge. My own sense is that when they are visceral interests that are at stake, nations will still find a way to do it, but they are going to have to do it much smarter.