 We are having a hit out for the first time of an ANZAC Amphibious Ready group. There's three ships behind us at the moment, the Choules, the Canberra and the Canterbury, the New Zealand Amphibious Unit. And what we're about to observe is what is called a combined force entry operation. We'll see an amphibious unit with its capabilities push ashore and land-to-land force. Amphibious capabilities are inherently flexible from peacetime rolls to wartime rolls. And that's why we need it and why we practice it. Doing this all together is part of the larger umbrella of Talisman Sabre in the way these things have been sequenced in here. It is a great demonstration of how we operate as coalition partners and also from a joint perspective. So you're looking at all services and then operating all the remains. So this has come together fantastic. The weather has worked out great for the airdrop and for the amphibious landing. We're excited to see how this thing works out with the Marine Corps and the other coalition partners out here. We execute an airdrop into a NO4 country 19 hours away. When they get to the ground, execute the mission that they've been trained for, execute it with discipline. That's what we're here to do with it. It assures our allies and our partners out across the Pacific that we are prepared and we are ready to face any challenge that we may meet. This is essential for us to be able to certify the amphibious ready group, working with both our Kiwis but also with our American allies. You can see that we are able to put our own practice alongside those of the other nations and prove the interoperability which is essential in an operation like this. So having US forces, New Zealand forces here with us brings a size and a mass that we can't replicate at any other time. Size is complex to organize and construct and move. So we learn a lot from doing so. This has been on our pathway for introducing the amphibious force for a while and it's a really important day for us.