I guess you could look at that in two different veins. One is what we could do five or 10 years down the road, when more of the modernization that's under way right now goes through, and that will open up a number of other options. We're going to have more modern and more capable warships, more modern and more capable fighter aircraft and surveillance assets of various different types.
In the short term, unfortunately for Canada, given where we are in our reinvestment and recapitalization process with our armed forces, we're actually entering into a period in which we're probably going to have less ability to be meaningfully engaged on a sustained basis. One of the key ways in which we've done so in the last 10 years is with our frigates, which are getting increasingly old. Some of them are approaching 30 years old, which means they're going to be less consistently available to send that long distance.
What we could try to do, though, is to look for innovative ways to send people if we can't send ships, to do rotations where that's possible and to look to get more people on the ground physically and in as many places as we can afford to.