That was our test, and it still is. We have ongoing discussions. We try to avoid summaries. We really want to have the exact wording of the decision. I think it's a constant struggle, and we need to do that.
Having said that, I'm sworn to secrecy. I'm of the school that says that secrecy must be protected. These aren't hide‑and‑seek tactics. Lives are at stake. Some of the techniques of operation are worth protecting because you can't go to war—we're at war now, because cyber‑attacks and things like that are a new form of war—with peashooters. We need to protect our information to ensure that our two agencies have the means to retaliate against other countries that don't have the limitations we have in Canada.
The only thing I always insist on is that there have to be bodies, such as the Office of the Intelligence Commissioner, an oversight body, and the National Security and Intelligence Review Agency, NSIRA, the civilian agency that looks at the facts after the fact and publishes reports, and the National Security and Intelligence Committee of Parliamentarians, NSICOP.
By the way, I read their report, the one on the trip to India, which the member took part in. I'm impressed by their work.
This is a huge burden being put on our shoulders. However, I think we're capable of doing that work, Mr. Villemure. I'm telling you this quite honestly, because I've been living in it since 1979.
As for the climate of secrecy that seems to be portrayed, it's disappearing, and more and more information is available. The recent report of the committee of parliamentarians is a prime example.