I would like a magic wand. I would do a number of things with it, but in the particular case of procurement, for National Defence and the Canadian Armed Forces, and for the Coast Guard, I would like to see a cyclical plan of procurement.
Number one, the Coast Guard has never had a class of ships built for them. They've had ships added in and old ships refitted. They are now, for the first time in the 65-year history of the Coast Guard, getting a class of ships that are built for purpose, built for them. That's very positive. The Canadian Armed Forces are equally.... The surface combatant is being built for them.
I would like to see a process in this country where it is evergreen procurement. For the surface combatant, you're halfway through building one fleet and you move on to start planning the next one. That's so you're not keeping ships in operation for 30 or 35 years and then starting to look at the next procurement.
It is complex and it is expensive, but I think that as the nation with the largest coastline in the world, and a huge land mass, keeping military and Coast Guard equipment major procurement as an evergreen and economically responsible program is a really critical move forward. If I had a magic wand on that front, that is what I would do.