Absolutely. NATO has a complex system of doctrine that governs joint operations, and so NATO itself has a joint operations publication that we all use to inform ourselves.
We have our own joint doctrine. Getting the army, navy, and air forces to work together in this context is more limited by the platforms and systems available than by our ability to work together with one another.
So there is a framework at play. There is a framework that allows us, as an example, to put Canadian soldiers to work with allies, even in a littoral context with the United States Marine Corps, with the Royal Marines, with the Brazilian marines. That framework exists.