—with our partners. From the Canada-U.S. perspective, military to military we have a high degree of coordinated planning capabilities. Our connection to our civilian authorities—national and state in the U.S., national and federal-territorial in Canada—is very high. It's routine. Again, it's something you want to be good at before the crisis manifests itself.
Our interoperability military to military is exceptional. Interoperability is not just technology and equipment; it's ways of seeing problems, ways of solving problems, ways of working together as people. Those are working very well.
The things that we continue to improve on are practising the plans and testing the interoperability of people and not just of equipment and technology. This is something we continue to pursue with our American partners. For that, training and exercises are the vehicles we use; they precede the actual problem itself.
We do that at my level, we do it at the regional level. The people who are really doing this.... I have six regional joint task forces in Canada: Joint Task Force North and from the Pacific to the Atlantic, and they have relationships north-south that they practise with our U.S. partners or—