 We have a saying in India which goes like Aditi Devo Bhava which means the guest should be treated like gods. Joining the army was my first time out of my state and so coming here to India has been, it's been great. The hospitality here is second to none and I think we've got some big shoes to fill when they hit America again. The food is great, the music is great and the people are the best. I couldn't have asked for more or a greater experience than what I've experienced here. The drills of the media machine guns I was explaining to one of the privates and after we, after I was done with that, the private came to me and he asked me whether he can exchange the patches, the national flags. And that's the best day, that was one of the best experience I had through the exercise. Being the intelligence advisor I'm looking to try and learn a little bit of Hindi but it's not. It hasn't been going as well as their English so it's not a terrible setback. The most important one is Kia Apengvesi Poteha which is, do you speak English? And that's about as far as I can get. We are building huge bonds like half of them are treating me like brothers and as an officer I'm getting treated like they belong to the same Italian and we are building good bonds in between, personal bonds and professional bonds as well. Training is sort of hey this is, it's going to be my way or their highway, this is how we're going to do it. And if there are signs of an IED and they call it out as soon as... It's here, it's a lot of exchanging of ideas and how we do things to try and find a happy middle ground or maybe I can take something from the Indian Army or the Indian Army take something from myself and how they conduct their operations. And we are exchanging our knowledge since the United States soldiers are having good exposure with the Afghanistan and Iraq. So we are exchanging the professional knowledge and the counter insurgency and counter terrorism off in the desert terrain. We have a lot of great additions that we can take back with us to the US and implement in our systems. At the end of the day we all are foot soldiers. The things we do, the drills which we do, the tactics, the procedures are more or less the same. At the end of the day we are foot soldiers. I think it's important to continuously maintain our friendship and relationship both on a personal and professional level. The soldiers are the protectors of peace and freedom. In the future we are expecting interoperativity between both the soldiers, both the soldiers from both the countries and we are exchanging military knowledge so that we can act together if something bad happens. A few weeks that we've been here I've gained probably a year's worth of experience interacting with the Indian Army. They've got a rich history of military operations, a rich cultural history in general. And they've got a lot to teach us.