Thank you, Mr. Chair.
One of the things that came up during conversations I had with congressmen was the perception, still, that Canada is a safe haven for terrorists and that we have a leaky, porous border. Even in the Senate some have said that southern Toronto is teeming with terrorists. I don't know where they are. Are they all hiding in Centreville? This is a real problem. This perception has sort of ingrained itself.
I wonder if you can help us with some facts and information to combat that. As an example, one of the things I have seen that I think would be helpful, if I could get it in some form other than anecdotal, are the names on the terror watch list and the number of hits on those names at different points of entry. It would demonstrate that Canadian ports of entry are showing fewer hits on that terror watch list than are American ports of entry.
I think we have to make the point crystal clear—and maybe you would agree with me on this—that an attack on New York is more likely, or at least as likely, to come from somebody landing in Boston as from somebody coming in through Toronto. Yet that is not the perception right now. The perception is that we are allowing terrorists to come in here and that we have a weak border through which people travel south. How do we combat that perception? Do you have some empirical data you can give us? I've given you one example. Do you have others?