Mr. MacGregor, thank you for that question. I think it's a very important one.
I would say—and this may be tinged with a degree of optimism—that the Indian government and RAW are learning some lessons from their attempted operations in countries like the United States and Canada. Unfortunately, they were successful in one case in Canada, with the murder of Mr. Nijjar.
What they're learning is that it's one thing to conduct covert operations in Pakistan, where the Pakistani government has a relatively weak security and intelligence capacity, but that it's quite a different thing to conduct these kinds of operations farther afield, in countries like the United States, western European countries, the U.K. and Germany, which have very strong security and intelligence systems, particularly the United States, and that also goes for Canada.
I think the Indians are now having second thoughts about the cost-benefit analysis of conducting these kinds of operations and whether they can really pull them off. They weren't able to pull off the U.S. operation, and that looks like a huge embarrassment for any intelligence organization. I think they're going to have to rethink these kinds of operations, targeting countries that are not in their near abroad.