 Very light trigger, very light pull. You cannot put it on safe if the bolt is forward. The hit is in the brava zone and two seconds for the alpha zone. The greatest will tell you. So hurry up. I'm 2nd Lieutenant Travis Jones. I'm a maintenance platoon leader for Golf FSE 1-9 CAF. We're out here working with the Germans to get the chutes and sneer. Marksmanship badge is a German marksmanship badge. The German marksmanship badge for American soldiers shows that we can both qualify on our weapons and we can have their prestigious honor of achieving the German chutes and sneer as well. So it just shows proficiency amongst the American troopers. Here today I shot very good. So we shot the M4 carbine 12 times. And then we switched over to the pistol, the M17, and shot the M17 nine times. Varying targets, it was a stress shoot. So there was physical activity as well as moving body parts, moving and shooting. It was very safe. We executed the training efficiently and to the German standard. Our unit's mission is to plus up the Enhance Forward Presence Battle Group for NATO. It's a NATO support mission being very close to things that are going on around the world and specifically very close to where we are. So it's great to come out and execute all of this training and to show that America is as invested into the Enhance Forward Presence Battle Group as anybody else. So it's been a great honor to come out here and train with foreign soldiers and more specifically for our troopers to get them the experience and to get their training in Poland. I'm from the Polish TDF, Territory Defense Forces. We are participating in the competition to get the German shoot censure, which is the shooting proficiency batch. And well, it's going well so far. It's the first time we have the similar qualification in Poland for the Polish shooting batch. We had the opportunity right now to participate in this joint exercise in order to qualify for the German batch. So it's something new. It's like the occasion to meet some other soldiers from the US, from Germany and to try to get some foreign batch, which we can earn. For me it's the first time when I'm working with the German soldiers. I worked in the past with the US Army. So it's something new. I mean, we are sharing the experience, we are sharing the different, let's say, approach. For me it's interesting how all the shooting is organized. It's different than what we do in the Polish Army. Regarding the procedures, regarding the drill and everything. So it's something that we can look, we can maybe learn something new from it. How to, let's say, arrange, how to change something when we are doing the shooting in Poland. US participation and stationing of the units in Poland increased over the time. So when I joined, we didn't expect that we will have so much cooperation with the US right now. I would say that, you know, our unit is basically, I would say maybe not on the daily basis, but like on the weekly, monthly basis we are cooperating with the US forces. We are training together. We are also inviting the US soldiers for the trainings to us. I mean, to train with us. We are participating in the trainings together with the US. So it's like exchange both ways. Hopefully the other guys will finish today and everybody will learn the batch. And we will have something that we can show, you know, to the others that we participated in some joint exercise. That we were able to score something on this exercise. And it's nice that it's arranged by the US, you know, and then the German batch, which we are basically fighting for to train it. And then you have also the Polish army here. So it's like a national exercise over here. For me, it's interesting to participate in it and to learn and hopefully to then like use this experience in my job. I mean, in my, what I do in my unit.