Thank you, sir. It's good to see you again.
With respect to your first question, on resources, I would just refer back to my opening statement. In the Royal Canadian Navy, HMCS Vancouver, there were about 275 personnel deployed on that vessel. In the air operations, the fighters that we have, the seven CF-18s, the two maritime patrol aircraft, and the Polaris and the Hercules tankers that we have been using, and then we have about 80-odd people, so that is about another 275 folks there. And about 80 folks are engaged in various levels of headquarters, inside of NATO, and for national requirements. That's about 630 folks. But it was largely the Royal Canadian Air Force and Royal Canadian Navy contributions to the mission.
In terms of asks for surveillance in response to NATO or the NTC, no, sir, we have not received any requests along those lines. All of the efforts we have applied have been within the context of Operation Unified Protector, and when that mission terminates then our assets will be re-deployed according to direction from the Government of Canada.
The last point you raised is a very interesting one on counter-insurgency operations. I would just say very quickly that in order for an insurgency to exist, you have to have popular support of some kind, and it has to be coalesced around some kind of leadership. We're not anticipating that, and certainly the former regime has no legitimacy or credibility that would lend itself to an insurgency for which we would have to apply a counter-insurgency operation.
So that would be my response to the first part of your question, sir. I will turn it over to Barbara for the rest.