I think there are two or three components to that question.
As I indicated earlier, when I spoke to the national security adviser, it was to express a general concern that we were working on a couple of files. It was a heads-up. We give a heads-up to the centre daily on a whole range of issues. Had we thought that it was a matter that merited the attention of the minister, I would have drawn it to the attention of the minister, and I suspect the NSA would have done so to the Prime Minister. But I repeat, the files we're working on are not immediate. There is no immediate danger. There is no direct critical violation of national security.
As I do on any number of files, I was drawing to her attention.... She has a coordinating role in the security and intelligence community. I was telling her that some time in the weeks or months ahead we would be coming forward with a couple of files, and I asked her how, if these files went forward, should we draw these to the attention of elements other than the federal government.