That's a good question.
I think we touched on that with the independent civilian oversight. Looking at the review bodies as they currently exist, there are exclusions for some kinds of information. For example, both NSIRA and NSICOP have restrictions around being able to access information that may prove injurious to national security or defence, and what could be excluded is incredibly broad. Also, in terms of access to information that relates to ongoing investigations, there's an incredibly broad exclusion.
There are ways to solve this. If it would be injurious to a criminal prosecution, restrict it to that. If it's an investigation that's time-limited and it's necessary for Defence, for example, to come back to the committee and say it is no longer injurious to its ongoing investigation so that others can resume their investigation....
Right now, those are the kinds of gaps and issues that we're concerned would still hinder the ability of these committees to fully investigate something like the Afghan detainee scandal.