At the same time, you spoke at length about cyber attacks, which originate internally and externally. My colleague, Jean-François, spoke about the capacity of splitting up the networks. That question has already been considered.
We know that one day, an attack will take place—it might originate internally or externally. We also know that one day, the defences will be penetrated. The true question is not whether it will happen, but rather how we will recover from that with respect to information.
Is the United States considering this capacity to recover, but especially recovering quickly? There are classic recovery plans, but if a number of incidents occur simultaneously—a natural disaster and a cyber attack, for example—we would be a clay-footed giant. We would be extremely weakened.
How is the capacity to recover from these kinds of incidents being considered on the cyber side?