Thank you for your trust. I'm grateful for it.
I have two points to make.
First, this matter is subject to judicial review. We talked about this, and Minister LeBlanc referred to this earlier. I don't want to play lawyer before the committee. However, as you know, in the case of a judicial review, the measures taken must be proportionate.
Second, in terms of national security, some of these orders must be secret for a reason. I'll provide an example, and you'll immediately understand the issue. If we find a flaw in a system, obviously we don't want state and non‑state actors to take advantage of the flaw before we can fix it. That's what we would be risking if we were to release all our orders.
Think about a cyber attack. In the case of 5G technology in particular, it will be decentralized. The weakest link in the chain could be attacked. In keeping with the interests of the company, the organization and Canadians, we should have the opportunity to issue a secret and confidential order in this type of situation, saying what must be repaired.
As we said, there will be feedback. We can report on the situation. The issue is that, in our democracies, state and non‑state actors who want to harm the country don't play by our rules. If I release information stating that the weakest link in our system is found in a given telecommunications system or service, I'm practically summoning the bad people before we've had time to repair the breach in our system.
I think that this would put the whole network at risk. That's why, in some cases, we must keep this information secret and confidential to protect national security.