Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I'd like to thank you for being here today and for the excellent testimony that you provided us.
You were mentioning, Mr. Wright, about cyber. When I was in Israel for a visit, I met with the company that does the cybersecurity for Hydro-Québec, my home province. We have a company outside of Canada that's actually providing cybersecurity for our power grid in the province of Quebec, so I know we are very behind in terms of cyber-expertise.
We've heard today that we are being reactive in some regards, versus proactive. We've heard you mention the plan of action that we should adopt, for instance revise and adapt our DND doctrine, provide the handbook guidelines and the framework, and adopt the TTPs. We've heard a bit about the fact that it needs a whole-of-government approach to address this issue. We've heard that, from a macro-level, NATO has not rewarded the bad behaviour but hasn't really smacked them down in terms of invading Crimea.
These things are going to take time. We've also heard that we're experiencing on a daily basis in Ukraine that people are dying. We had four soldiers killed yesterday. My question to you, because we'll have to be doing these things in parallel, is what should Canada be doing in the short, mid, and long term to help resolve this?
We have Operation Unifier, but we need to be flying the plane at the same time as we're building it. Could you elaborate on what your suggestions are in the short and mid term?