Absolutely. I think obviously for the sake of supporting our Ukrainian partners but, at the same time, more importantly for our own good. For example, the training mission that we have in Ukraine right now, yes, Canada is doing a lot to train Ukrainian troops and it saves lives and does all that good stuff. But at the same time we as Canadians are benefiting as much, learning about new Russian tactics, new Russian weaponry from those troops who are on the front line, engaged with the Russians day in and day out. We as Canadians are learning a lot and we are benefiting a lot. I would rather see us learning from Ukrainian troops in western Ukraine as opposed to learning, God forbid, two or three years from now having Latvia on the battlefield with Russia.
I think the same analogy can be applied here to cybersecurity. I think we should get engaged, we should help Ukrainians with the technologies and the capabilities and experience we have. But we should also jump on this bandwagon and learn as much as we can as quickly as we can so we can do some preventive actions here in Canada, also with our NATO allies.