I can tell you that transparency is at the forefront of NORAD. We try to actually inform—within the limits of operational security, obviously—the Canadian public of our activities so that they understand what we do and what the great Canadians and Americans within the alliance here at NORAD do.
I don't drive the training plan of Russian long-range aviation. There have been cycles, as I've mentioned. We've seen up to 15 and an average of six to seven intercepts per year. A good chunk of that, just by pure proximity, happens to be close to the Alaskan identification zone. We've seen Russian activities that sometimes move on from the Alaskan NORAD region to the Canadian NORAD region, to which CANR has been very agile in responding, either by deploying directly from Cold Lake or by moving fighters to one of our forward operating locations in the north.
We have seen it. It's just that in last couple of months the preponderance of the activities has been focused on the Alaskan NORAD region.