This is the political and diplomatic dilemma. Yes, indeed, we have sovereignty over our airspace, but every other country does as well. So I think the point here, as little as it suits me to discuss with parliamentarians what parliamentarians should do relative to diplomatic relations, is that surely this an issue the world over.
What we've seen in the kind of security hysteria since 9/11 is none of these things getting smaller. They only get bigger. The rebalancing around security and liberty only appears to be happening in one direction and it seems to us time that we reached out to our allies the world over who are also facing these kinds of dire sovereignty issues to formulate some alliances and to look for some international solutions to these dilemmas instead of letting them be driven by, as we sometimes euphemistically put it, the international forum, but we actually know where that is coming from. So that's my immediate suggestion.
The other thing is of course we need to let Canadians know what's happening. There is so little awareness around these kinds of issues, and if we're going to lobby this country to try to maintain a view of what sovereignty means in terms of these issues, then first we have to have some awareness.