 My non-firing hand is on his shoulder as a signal. Training is definitely going pretty good. I'm getting a lot of these guys integrated. We're trying to mix up the Georgians and the U.S. soldiers. You do the training inside the building. You can only fit so many personnel inside the building. So we try to do it to where it's transparent and all personnel can see what's going on inside the building. Scan lobes? More or less, this kind of training is universal. So them watching the U.S. guys do it, who can understand it, it gets them involved and they can pick it up a lot quicker. Weapon down, weapon down! Yeah, I love it. I love them out. There's always different ways that you can think about entering your room. Their room's the same, so it's fun to think about. Start scanning once again, alright? That's the biggest thing for me, is just sharing experiences, sharing different techniques that we use. Alright, so two gives the squeeze to one and on that squeeze, they move into the building. We gain the experience of working with our partner countries where we might be battling something like a language barrier and we're working out those problems now so that when the time comes that we have to go downrange and we do have those stumbling blocks, we already have tactics and techniques to be able to push through that. For the sake of this, I think we'll go and intermingle with both countries and then we'll run a stack of four. Any questions?