Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I'll echo my colleagues' thank you to our witnesses for appearing before our committee and helping us with the course of this study.
Dr. Burton, I would like to start with you.
You had spoken in your opening remarks about the relationship between CSIS, the RCMP and CSE, and about the fact that the Parliament of Canada sometimes doesn't have a very good analysis of what those individual national security agencies are up to.
I want to put this in the context of the fact that the act that authorized the National Security and Intelligence Committee of Parliamentarians is due for a statutory review this year. I think that review lends itself to our current study because, as you said, we are woefully unprepared to meet many of the security threats.
Do you have any recommendations for what you would like to see that review cover? Is the current model of parliamentary oversight working? What would you like to see done differently? Are there any models, say, in the United States Congress or in the U.K. Parliament that we should be looking at as examples?