Well, this is a little out of my area of expertise, but I would answer it this way. I'm not sure if I would label this a Defence problem. National Defence and NORAD, for example, have always thought that they should have a lead role in North American cyber-defence or cybersecurity. I don't think that's necessarily the case. The issue becomes when you have this mix of defence, and those are largely closed or isolated systems and you have a mixture of public and private systems involved. How do you coordinate this? How do you get everyone to sing from the same song sheet? That's a problem with the way we've organized government in the past, at least in my view.
At the end of the day, this should be a lead for Public Safety. That's where this key element belongs, not with Defence, but with Public Safety. They need to be able to do more than simply perform a coordinating function, although that's very important.
I think we have to be careful when we have governments structured as military has structures, in terms of silos that tend to problematically not be able to talk to each other and don't want to talk to each other. How do you eliminate those barriers? That's something important for the Government of Canada to take a very close look at. The program you're talking about is a good initial step forward, but we have to proceed further on that than we are right now.