 The reason why you use soft operators is because their ability and their skill set is home to be able to discriminate. You don't need daylight to do it. You prefer the night because we own it. We had over 500 special operators from the United States involved in the exercise. We had both fixed wing and rotary wing aircraft. We had maritime forces from the Marines and the Navy and also Army Special Forces and almost a like number of Australians. Approach those ships whether it's clandestinely, quietly or it's on helicopters coming in fast. We all see the movies where the seals are getting on the ship and taking down the targets quickly but there's more to that. Hours of limited visibility allows you the surprise effect on a target. People don't know you're coming. They don't suspect you're coming. When these operations go down they're sensitive. Time sensitive is the key. It's important that you minimize collateral damage, civilian casualties. You're talking about mature Special Forces operators who make mature decisions on the spot that's going to save not only the lives of your operators but the lives of those that are not involved. We have great technology. It allows us to be very, very effective at night when a lot of threat forces would not be so capable. It minimizes the chance for civilian casualties in any sort of kinetic operation and so that gives us a lot more freedom and maneuver without the chance of anybody else being in the way. Do this. That guy's been searched. Anyone who's been searched, cross their arms. And bring home every member, minimize collateral damage, civilian casualties and produce time sensitive products that will save lives at the end of the day. In combat it doesn't matter who the brother next to you is, what uniform he's wearing. If he's a soft operator you're in it together and there's no outside help for the most part. Nine times out of ten you're on your own. When you get into conflict it's not so much what the overarching goals are strategically. It's ensuring that you and your brothers get home and you live to share those experiences together.