Let me answer that in a couple of ways. One, in my last post I was the director general for cyberspace. It was a force development position. Part of what I was doing was analysis and research on what the demands were, what the requirements are, and what the changes in threats and risks are, and to try to put forward some ideas on force structure and developments for where we should go in terms of building our cyber-forces in the future.
It's certainly not part of my current mandate. That area evolves, as you can appreciate, very, very quickly, so if I were to give definitive answers now along that line, my information would likely be out of date from when I last worked on it. I certainly wasn't commanding our efforts. We have capabilities today. We need more. I think we have plans to invest in more. It's recognized that we have to defend our systems. That's a requirement wherever you're based—here, in the north, or overseas.
I don't have the latest developments on what will be in the program going forward, but I know that we are looking at what we need and investing in it.