Thank you, Mr. Chair, and I want to thank our witnesses for being here and for their testimony.
I want to follow up on what Leona was just questioning on. I think all of us look at cyber-defence maybe a little bit differently from the way it's been implemented. I look at National Defence, I look at our Canadian Armed Forces, and if a foreign nation flies a fighter jet near our airspace, we scramble our jets to intercept and escort them out. If a submarine popped up in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, our navy would be there immediately to defend our sovereignty. If little green men landed on Vancouver Island, I know that National Defence would ensure that our troops were on the ground to counter that, yet you're saying that if a foreign entity attacks our cyber infrastructure, if it's civilian-based—whether it's our banking systems, our subway systems, or our power grid—we're going to sit back and let Public Safety be the lead rather than have National Defence defend our sovereignty.
Is that policy, or is that legislation?