They are in reality, but in our government we have tended to focus on the Canadian security establishment to watch and monitor, because while they may be military in intent, as we know, they are often aimed at vital infrastructure, particularly public utilities, which are managed on the civilian side.
I have looked at this issue around the world. I think the Baltics, which are often subject to attacks from the Russians, tend to consider this military, but it's a mix of military and civilian. We are de facto doing that anyway, so there's a military aspect to this; there's a civilian aspect, and then there's an industry aspect to this, which is trying to link the pieces together. I think CSE has probably been charged with doing that and seems to be managing it well, but it certainly is an area, as you pointed out, that is the future battlefield.
If you look at Ukraine, they are probably going to do cyber-attacks before they send in the rockets, and they have already used cyber-attacks to try to destabilize the Ukrainian government, as an example.