The operations providing surveillance and sovereignty come under the over-watch, if you will, of the Canadian Joint Operations Command. I would defer to General Coates, who I think may, in fact, be talking about surveillance and ground search and rescue.
From the overall perspective of giving capabilities to the Rangers, I would go back to my initial statement about their capabilities. They are already trained when they come in. To go and have the enhanced additional training would have to be seen as an additional capability that we would have to provide them, and it would determine if they were, in fact, the right ones to carry on and/or conduct that type of operation, whether it's with drones or with other systems that would be made available to them.
The bottom line is that it would have to be looked at as a demand and a capability, and I would put to you that the Canadian Forces as a whole would determine where best to come up with that capability. I don't believe that's necessarily being looked at as a ranger responsibility.