Mr. Chairman, I think the ministers have said very clearly that the reason they're conducting this review at the present time is to find out if, specifically in this case—or more broadly, systemically—there are gaps that need to be filled.
Judging by what appears in the public media to this point about these particular cases—and we're all operating under an information limitation of what can be put in the public domain and what cannot—no one had any information about a terrorist connection to these individuals until about June of this year.
None of our agencies had prior access to any such information, and neither did the Americans, the British, anybody in the Five Eyes or any of our other allies. When the connection was identified in about June of this year, it was immediately imparted and acted upon. The public was protected, and the suspects were arrested.
Can all of that process in the circumstances of this case be improved upon? That is what the ministers are conducting their review to find out.