 So you guys made the mission happen, but bounding back successively or alternating, he was just always slightly ahead. To keep someone's targets up, to keep them shooting to allow the other person to move forward. You guys, you guys picked up on that. Echo tango, three, five, three, five, nine or one, five, four. I'm covering the wound. Back, take off if you're sure. Check for any exit wounds. One, two, three. Are I gonna move? Yeah. Back and go. I'm a 25-uniform, which is a Sigma support system specialist. And one thing that's really different, or one thing I really like about operating in an S-Valve, is being in a 12-man team. And it's a very versatile team. So you have every aspect that you can do as far as the fighting function from fires, communications. You have your operations, and it's really just there for a 12-man team to get on ground. They can self-sustain, but also provide the support or assist or the liaison between us and our partner forces. For example, Fiji requested S-Valve to come to help stand up their NCO Academy, and also help train as far as some of the war fighting functions and maneuvering. So we just come in, we leave some of that stress off the special forces. We come in and we train anything from the basic war fighting functions, all the way up to our specialty as far as tech, you know, like communications and things in that aspect. Being in a 12-man team, it's more versatile. So that's one thing that I really enjoyed coming to the S-Valve, being a communication advisor. Not only do I still get to hone my skills as a communicator, but it also leaves me at a technical advantage when it comes to maneuvering and, you know, the basic war fighting functions.