Thank you, General, for coming and sharing your insight based on your experience. I noted in your paper and, of course, from your experience that you were a fighter pilot. I was quite interested in how you brought that experience to the question of the use of armed drones in aerial combat and the fact that you saw this as something—I wouldn't call it far-fetched—far into the distance, and you suggested that it doesn't seem terribly realistic in the time and distances for back and forth information, as well as what you call the creativity involved in aerial combat.
You also said—and I heard this echoed, by the way, in Europe in the last week—that you were concerned about international law and the fact that we don't really have any proper law that governs it, and it's a field that hasn't been properly addressed yet, as another impediment to Canada getting involved in drones. Could you elaborate on either of those points?
I share your view, by the way, that Canada should be looking elsewhere for use for drones, but could you just comment on those two things first.