Thank you for the question on the Permanent Joint Board on Defence. It was Bob Gates who called it the peanut butter and jelly board.
The PJBD since 1940—it just shows what a succinct press release can do—generated quite an extraordinary relationship. We are now on, I think, our 232nd meeting, which will take place in June. It is actually established by the President and the Prime Minister, so it's at that level. They designate co-chairs. On the Canadian side at the moment Mr. Hawn is the Canadian co-chair, and a gentleman by the name of Mr. Spratt is the U.S. co-chair, both politically appointed.
Beneath that I chair it in support of our co-chair with my U.S. counterpart. We have a number of participants from the Department of Foreign Affairs, the Privy Council Office. We have a very rich range of military representatives at that table. We have in the last number of years.... I was proud to say that I brought in public safety, the coast guard, to reflect this broader approach to the defence of North America that we need to look at, to make sure we didn't miss any dimension of how we looked at the security of North America.
It meets on a regular basis. The 800 arrangements you point to go from very detailed, how we buy and sell fuel for each other to much more strategic ones. I think it's very complex because our relationship is very deep and long-standing.