 Yeah, you can. You can take that berm right there by the red road right there. White house on the back side. White roof, yeah, over there. Follow me. Ready to go. Covering up down that road. Second gun's going in this berm right beside this white house with the red roof facing down this little street coming at us that we can't really see down. There's no one that way. Until they start shifting this way, everyone else. So we're in northern Norway and we just executed amphibious assault off of the Dutch ship Rotterdam to initiate our first steps in conducting exercise cold response. This is a very unique situation for the United States Marine Corps to be embarked on a Dutch Royal Naval vessel and then conduct amphibious assaults off of that vessel. No one has done it in our battalion and no one has done it, I think, at all ever. And so this is a first, not only for the Dutch Royal Navy, but also for the Marine Corps specifically here in the high north. The message that it sends is that we're strong. The message that it sends is that we are united. In these times, that is the most important message that we can send that we're doing this together as a team. Marines from day one are told that we're going to fight any climate in any place. And I think being here with NATO solidifies that and nothing changes. We always train hard. We train for whatever may happen in the world. For us to be able to have that interoperability with all of our allies and be a deterrent force here is incredibly important. So all the Marines have really enjoyed learning from the Dutch and learning from the Norwegians about how to survive and thrive in a cold weather environment in the far north. And I think that the other countries have learned from us as well. We created this exercise two years ago and it has been two years of planning. We haven't changed the exercise objectives much. We have stand two. We had enough forces available to reach the exercise objectives. At the same time, some nations had to deploy other places in the world. That's normal, quite normal. We also had to deploy a frigate to the Mediterranean. But what is good is that we have the command network and available assets necessary to resolve our training objectives. What it means for me is the importance to rehearse our plans and to exercise together with the allies because we need to be prepared. And the most important thing I do is to avoid war on NATO territory. That's my job. And to reach that goal, we need to exercise and to have a credible capability. So I think that's the most important part of it.