I think it's a bit of both. As I said a minute ago, China in particular but also others have become much more aggressive and assertive, but I also think that, compared to our close allies, Canada has been a little bit slower in providing the state with tools to deal with this.
I'm not suggesting that it's been ignored, but I am suggesting that it's taken us a while to get there. The United States, the United Kingdom and Australia have dealt with this issue, I think, more quickly than we have. Your colleagues in Australia, for example, have enacted a variety of pieces of legislation to directly address both foreign interference and espionage.
I think the main difference is that, when an adversary goes through a list of countries it wants to attack, it will do something in each of them, but if there's one that is slightly less organized, slightly less structured to push back, the adversary will make a bit of an effort there.