Government identifies its intelligence priorities. That is a cabinet process that tells the intelligence communities to go forth and get us intelligence. There is a level of opacity in that process that, I think, is challenging. There is scope for making how government decides what our intelligence priorities are more transparent to Parliament and more transparent to Canadians.
When those priorities are identified, we understand who needs it and then work very hard to ensure that the people who asked for that intelligence get it. The problem is, as I pointed out in my statement, oftentimes we don't hear back from deputies, senior officials or ministers whether we are getting what they need. That's why I said that interface needs to be improved, and there's a role for the national security and intelligence adviser to strengthen that process.