 26. And remember, if it's just fire, that's when you throw down. The cannon's perfectly hard. Fire! That was so hard to do. Alright, watch this. Next round. Angle, you ready? I've been a profit specialist from Bravo 179. I'm a 6-day whiskey, a combat medic. So the biggest thing we're trained to is for any sort of gunshot wounds, IED blasts, any sort of explosions, anything like that. The best part of being a 6-day whiskey medic is being attached to the infantry company and just doing what they do, shooting all the big guns that you don't get to as a medic usually. Stuff like that. All the guys have been trained on CLS. You have your medics and then underneath them are combat lifesavers. They're not trained to the same standard as medics, but they're trained for similar injuries like gunshot wounds, amputations, anything like that that the soldier might get in the battlefield. I think I'm going to learn a lot about this deployment and hopefully learn from everyone else too when I grow as a person. Specialist Wesley Hardin, my unit is Bravo Company 179 Infantry. The objective today is just a standard squad attack. You come out of an ORP, which is an objective rally point. One of the team leaders will set up a support by fire, just like a local support by fire that's supporting the assaulting element as they bound up. And the assaulting element will conduct just a team assault, and they'll assault through the objective. We can kind of see where guys are having shortcomings or what people are really good at. We can use that to improve the final product which you're about to see. We come out here for a lot of fires. We have to be able to know that we can do it in real life. Everybody has an assigned role. We have to pin down that role until you can't do it wrong, until I can't do it wrong. None of these guys at the end of this stuff should be able to do any of this wrong. We've done it so many times. I love the Infantry, I love the Oklahoma National Guard, and I love Bravo Company once.