Let me answer the easy question. Is where we are with the design okay? Absolutely it is. We're doing the right thing. We're taking our time, because in shipbuilding, design is key. You don't start before you have a good design ready for production.
We talked a bit earlier about Canadianization. There's very little Canadianization on the Canadian surface combatants, but there are approximately 250-plus systems coming together on one of the most complex ships that will be built on this planet. This is what's happening right now for the Canadian surface combatant.
From a process point of view, I'm okay with Irving Shipbuilding, Lockheed and BAE working together, taking their time to give us, with their good accountability, a design that makes sense. We will gain from that in the build process.
What we could do to make sure that we don't have capability gaps.... I'm sorry I'm coming back to this point. It's not so much a PSPC point. It's really how we approach the entirety of the machine. We now know—and we're not the only ones in the world who are seeing this—how long it takes to build a complex warship. One would say that by the time we're building CSC number 10 or 11, we should probably start thinking about the next one, because that's how much time it takes.
Right now, to the question about culture and understanding, that's where we are. Delivering complex systems for the Canadian Armed Forces takes time. There's no store called Complex Systems for the Canadian Forces. We need to work with industry and make sure we prepare and have adequate time to deliver.