Let me try to answer.
As Mr. Justice O'Connor concluded in his report, officials of CSIS--the organization and anyone in it--did not provide any information to any foreign government about Mr. Arar. The information provided to the United States was provided by the RCMP. Going back to Mr. Brown's question, I think Mr. Justice O'Connor also concluded that the information the RCMP compiled in the course of its work was based on the RCMP investigation, not necessarily on anything that we had done or not done.
I recognize very much the issue you're getting at of public confidence in an institution such as ours. But I do think that a reading of Justice O'Connor's report would certainly endorse what I've just said. I would also recognize, as I recognized in my opening statement, that he criticizes CSIS on several matters, which I responded to in my opening statement, including the torture assessment and the single-voice letter and the issue of leaks. At the end of the day, we are unfortunately in the position, regrettably, in many instances, of being bound by issues of national security confidences that put limitations on what we can say publicly.