Thank you, and thank you, witnesses, for being a part of today's review of the Auditor General.
First of all, I want to say to the lieutenant-general, to your troops, and to the troops over there another thank you, not just from me but I think from all Canadians, for putting forward the Canada First defence strategy. I think someone mentioned earlier that over the years we've been involved in many countries. Most of those countries have not been as it is in Afghanistan, where it is actually a full war, but they have been peacekeeping missions, even though they maybe were not, and maybe our people were not as fully trained and equipped and what have you as they should have been.
I want to recognize everyone for having their feet on the ground. The complexities...the incredible responsibility that individuals must have when they see things that need to be enhanced, processes that likely need to be improved, and yet the time to protect our men and women, in my mind, falls a little behind the process. It's really about getting the job done. I think you've done some of that. I believe now there may have been some processes that were not in place or followed. I can't speak to why they weren't in place, but the reality is, the important part is, that you took action. The action is about protecting our people who are over there protecting Canada.
It makes it interesting. When you see something happening...we've got equipment, and you're finding that changes need to be made to the equipment in terms of making it safer. How do you go about that? Is it because you know there's the equipment or the addition of the protective materials or whatever? It's out there, you don't have it, and you've got to find it because somebody else has it. Or is there a time when our minds say they're not sure we've got the research from the manufacturers to build it yet? How does that work? When you say we need this or we need to do better with it, how do you get it and get some of it in place so quickly?