I think it adds a lot of pressure here in Canada. We are a small player. We do international deployments but, in my region—which is a large constituency in northern Canada—if you ask my citizens what the number one military need was this past summer, during catastrophic climate fires.... We didn't have Hercules aircraft to lift people out of the fire zones. We're using our military for floods, fire and all kinds of domestic needs. I think it's a similar situation in the United States.
We're trying to respond to Ukraine, because we have a very close emotional and historical relationship, but we're having to provide materiel that has probably not been considered necessary since the fall of the Berlin Wall. We also have some of our allies, like Hungary, not doing anything to help. This puts us in a difficult position when it comes to supplying the needs to stop the Putin war machine.
Do you see things starting to improve, or do we have to shift gears in terms of friendshoring? Do we have to shift who does what, so we actually get supplies to Ukraine?