I'm just going to interject. There was a senior leader who used to describe the world in a way that I thought was quite profound. He would say that the world's on fire, trying to convey to Canadians that there's a tremendous amount of volatility, complexity, uncertainty, and ambiguity that is prevalent in many of the regions that we have interests in and that we operate in.
The one flavour that is quite unique in what we're doing today, which perhaps is distinctly different from the past and is reflected as one of our missions in our defence policy, is that of capacity building. When you look at the Ukraine; when you look at the NATO contribution we're making in Bismayah, just outside of Baghdad, training ISF in counter-IED skills; when you look at what we're doing in places like Niger, with our conventional forces, and with our special forces in Tunisia.... We're essentially working shoulder to shoulder with some of these allies to help strengthen their military forces, because we recognize, as Mr. Gwozdecky indicated, the nature of transnational effects. Crime and violent extremism spread beyond borders, so we have to build shoulders of strength around the globe, and we do that uniquely today in our capacity-building mission set.