I think it's fair to say that's the essence of what Canadians expect you to do, and we thank you very much for that.
One of the things that we see with our closest neighbours to the south.... The area you operate in, nobody wants to know you're there, particularly when everything is safe. I see our American neighbours having a couple of recent incidents, looking at their intelligence agency, and making the suggestion that it broke down because it didn't gather the information that may or may not have saved these last two incidents.
I think Mr. McColeman has that essence. That's what Canadians expect. That's what they want to do. I think we would see that your work in that area is like that of police officers. If they're going to catch bank robbers, they have to talk to bank robbers and so on.
In addition to what you're doing in Afghanistan, those 200 people that you've already mentioned...those are potentially issues that would happen in this country. I'm just wondering if there's anything you can expand on without being specific.