I would ask Denis to follow up.
I have to say that Afghanistan was a bit of a wake-up call. The idea of pooling resources in a combat mission with our closest allies did not really pan out. I think that even today in NATO, when the secretary general, as a way of overcoming budget issues, encourages allies to pool resources and capabilities, Canada, certainly when I was there, would intervene by saying, “We understand the theory, but on the ground in a combat situation, pooling resources with allies does not always work out.” As close as those allies can be, including the U.S. and the U.K., by the way, when you need the helicopters for a medevac, when you need the UAVs to see where those IEDs are being planted, and our allies say, “Yes, we hear you, but we're busy; we have commitments of our own for our own troops”, and you don't have those ears and eyes, and you don't have the medevac when you need it, that's a wake-up call.
We've acquired the helicopters and UAV capability, and I think we're in a much better position today to understand that, when we go somewhere, we bring the whole kit we need, and if we don't have the kit, we don't go.