There are two kinds of information sharing. The first is the constant discussions and sharing of analysis and assessments that go on among governments and around the NATO committee tables. The North Atlantic Council has several supporting committee operations. That is fairly frank and fairly comprehensive. Clearly, some information is held back by some people from other people. If you're the Americans or certain other members of the alliance, you have intelligence collection systems and material that has a very special character that you don't share with everybody. It has been a remarkable development in NATO over the past 10 or 15 years how much more intelligence is now being shared within the alliance than used to be the case.
When I served in NATO along with Colonel Pellerin, who is our executive director, back in the early 80s, it was a very difficult thing to get the hard intelligence into the general discussion.