Thank you very much, Chair. Thank you to both of you for being here today.
Mr. Boisvert, I want to start by talking about cybersecurity and offensive capability. In your presentation, you talked about a community of like-minded nations coming together and taking cybersecurity very seriously for a number of reasons, not just from a public safety perspective or traditional national security perspective but also for the defence of basic democratic principles.
I wonder if you could talk about where we are—or where CSE is, I should say—in terms of what's being proposed for an offensive cyber ability and how that compares to other middle powers. I won't talk about the U.S., but, for example, the Australian Signals Directorate, the equivalent to the CSE, has an offensive cyber capability. In New Zealand, the Government Communications Security Bureau is the equivalent to CSE. It's not directly involved in mounting an offensive cybersecurity strategy, but that is in effect conducted by the defence force. That's in place there.
Where are we in terms of our Five Eyes allies? Let's look at what they're doing and compare that to what we're doing.