Warfare has been the way it's been for many years. This is a new spinoff from actual war and what we're used to planning for and what our leaders are used to dealing with over time. These forays into these different countries, we get them in Canada but it doesn't mean to say we're going to get invaded. However, in the Ukraine and in Crimea, they were preconceived attacks that resulted in annexation for Crimea, and then some occupation of the Ukraine.
We did not know or we didn't realize at the time that this is what the cyber-attacks were a result of. Of course, the other countries in that part of the world are going to be worried that if they start having more and more cyber-attacks against their particular critical infrastructure facilities, Russia is going to make a move into their country.
This is what worries them. It should worry us as well because we have to deal with them as well, as well as most of the other western countries. Until we really get a handle on cyberwarfare—and I think my colleague wants to talk about quantum computers shortly, which could be a deal-breaker for all this because I can't talk about that type of thing—I think we're going to ask, when we have this overabundance of cyber-activity, what does it mean? Does it mean they're just feeling us out, or does it mean this is a precursor for another attack?