I can't comment on the capabilities of CSEC, seeing as I'm not really speaking on its behalf nor am I an employee nor do I have privilege to be able to access it at that level. However, if I talk about it from an institutional point of view, I think CSEC has definitely taken a leading role in cybersecurity in Canada because, quite frankly, that's the institution where government has been able to bring together the expertise and know-how to do so. Whether that should continue to be the centre, going forward, I think is a very good question.
Again, I think, the past is prologue here. Air traffic control, at one point in time, was the responsibility of the Department of Defense in the U.S. Currently a civilian agency is responsible. I think there are capabilities that currently exist within CSEC that have to be migrated out into law enforcement and other government departments that have a responsibility for ensuring those components of cybersecurity that apply to very specific sectoral areas. I think overall, though, from an institutional point of view, there has to be an understanding and I think a recognition of the fact that cyberspace requires an emphasis equal to what we put to territorial security, economic security, and energy security. We should treat it in the same kind of way in terms of the kind of intergovernmental and interagency coordination that would allow us to have a coordinated policy.