There isn't a fair way of dealing with this issue. There's a vast body of literature about what you measure and how you can compare it. There were efforts that said, look, we should actually look at what we do in terms of numbers of forces. But how do you compare a nation with a big army with one with a big navy and all of that sort of stuff? Everybody has tried it. There have been hundreds of studies about what you should do. Lots of European countries—Canada perhaps doesn't do procurement organizing quite the same way—argue those sorts of things.
The problem is that if you also look at value for money, in Europe we get possibly 50% the same value for money in our procurement as does the United States. Even if we started to say that we should compare capabilities, if you looked at the comparison of capabilities in aggregate it would be far worse for Europe as compared with the United States.
Lots of nations do lots of very good niche things. They all do. At the end of the day, it's not fair, but it's the least—