I'll give George a chance to answer that as well, but I think the name of the game has always been, or should have been, maybe much sooner than we've now realized, that in due course Afghanistan has to stand on its own feet and look after its own security and deal with its own internal problems. We can help in a lot of different ways up until 2014, but at a certain point you have to say that this is as far as is reasonable for you to expect us to go in certain functions. We'll stay in other ways and do some other things.
It seems to me that the biggest problem, one of the major problems, Afghanistan has is Pakistan. I'd like to see a great deal more of our collective effort focused on helping Pakistan. It's a Commonwealth country. We used to have military training cooperation. There are Canadian soldiers who trained in Quetta. We've lost all of that, and somehow or other, for its own reasons, Pakistan has collapsed internally and it's a major sower of problems in Afghanistan.
I think we're Afghanistan-bound way beyond 2014, but what we do and how we do it will be very different from what we've done in the last 10 years.