With regard to the audit, I try to speak my mind at these meetings. When things annoy me I say so, and when I get really angry I let it go. At the risk of future audits proving this to be untrue, this is the second go-around. We've only had two that I can recall directly where we've taken a look at auditing inside the Department of Defence during a war. Given the experience we've had with the fog of war, what that means, and everything entailed in that, I have to tell you that overall I've been impressed.
There are mistakes here, and we're going to get into that and do everything we can to eliminate them. I don't like to give certain folks certain credits, but I have to tell you that where it's due I have been very impressed.
Madam Fraser, you mentioned that you went there and talked to the soldiers. One of the things that struck my mind when I was reading this--in our culture we relate so much to the movies of the day and our contemporary culture--was Catch-22, as far as that disconnect between what's happening on the ground and what's happening in a big ivory tower, meaning all of us. The worst example is Apocalypse Now, where it has just gone completely crazy. Yet I read in your remarks that when you were there on the ground your sense from the soldiers was that this was working for them too.
If we can make it work at this level of detail, analyzing, with the benefit of hindsight being 20/20, every decision, word, comma, and number put on a piece of paper and all that entails here at this end of things, and then all the way to Afghanistan, to have the soldiers on the ground say, “Yes, this is working for us”, I'm sure it's not perfect, but to hear that means a lot. As a Canadian and a parliamentarian not of the governing party, I'm very proud of the job I've seen, the work that's being done, and how well you've been able to, for the most part, in the midst of a long war, maintain the integrity of the procedures and steps, and all that paperwork that sometimes tends to get in the way.
That's kind of a long-winded comment. As much as I'll get into the details and there'll be a little criticism, I am very impressed. I want to say to all those involved here today, I think you're doing a hell of a job in some very difficult times. I hope this holds as we continue to audit in the years going forward, because you've earned it, you deserve it, and you're doing a really good job.
I have a couple of questions. I'm curious why after being at war for so long we still don't have an urgent operational requirement, a URO. I would think that Defence anyway, let alone in a time of war, would have had this come up so often it would be one of the most frequently used forums and procedures in your whole procurement process.
Enlighten me as to what I'm not seeing.