I think it's an interesting question.
I think the key alliance network in which Canada participates and where we're able to do significant work is the Five Eyes partnership. Many of the Five Eyes members, or at least some of them, are also members of NATO—Canada, the U.S., the U.K.—so it spills over into NATO. The Five Eyes is the key partnership for enhancing cybersecurity. A lot of work is going on there, I think, behind the scenes.
Very quickly, I would like to draw the committee's attention to one of the problems we have in Canada. CSE has a certain mandate. You see it in their cyber-threat assessment, which CSE officials have mentioned. They want to talk about strategic threats to Canada—that is, foreign state active threats—because that's in their mandate. There's a whole other world of threats to Canada and Canadians, including through cybercrime, which is not CSE's issue. It is the issue of the RCMP.
This is just a plea to the committee that, if you have the time in this study or in the future, we really need to have a look at how the RCMP is able to deal with this vast world of cybercrime and its impacts.