Again, Mr. Chair, that's a great question.
Really, the question is what capability Canada has to have, not necessarily the Canadian Armed Forces. I'll just expand on that.
I think what you're seeing play out today is nations using all instruments of national power, and then the military having capabilities across all warfare domains. In terms of international power, it's about making sure that our diplomatic efforts are aligned with our military efforts, our economic efforts and our information efforts. You're seeing information and disinformation being used globally right now—and I'll turn to my colleague, Major-General Wright, for that—but the point is that all aspects of national power are being used to coalesce.
On the military side, what we're talking about is exactly as you've just said. The world has changed in the past few decades. It's no longer a fight on just the land, sea and air; you're seeing an all-domain fight. This includes the traditional domains of land, sea and air, where you need capabilities across all, plus you're seeing significant cyber activity, significant activity in space and significant activity in the information domain. The cyber domain, the space domain and the information domain are all contested domains, just like the land, sea and air.