 I am Specialist Austin Rasmussen. I'm a medic at 68 Whiskey. We are doing some cross-training with the medical units of different countries such as Colombia, Brazil, and we also have the US Air Force and US Army out here. We're doing some medical training just to load and unload patients onto helicopters, as well as treating them and giving them whatever care is needed based off their injuries. As far as international exercise, yeah, this is my first one. I've really enjoyed it so far. There's a bit of a language barrier, but it seems like everyone just kind of understands that and they like working with you and they're very helpful and very knowledgeable. Each country has a different way of treating patients and what they classify as critical or not. In the US, we're heavily trained on, like especially in the Army, we're heavily trained on trauma and getting people in and out, kind of like emergency room kind of things and just doing the triage, getting the most critical patients, taking care of first. It was kind of the same here, however, just like minor details, the same, but for the most part it was fairly similar, really good exercise. It was great to get the experience of working with different countries. In the Army, we do that a lot, just military in general. We have a lot of opportunity to work with different countries or NATO forces and it's just really nice to get that experience as well as understand where they stand like medically and help them out and them teach us, kind of thing. So I'm a part of the 396 TASH, Combats Poor Hospital. We're based out of Washington, currently deployed to Soto-Kano Air Base, a part of JTF Bravo, underneath the South Com. We are down there providing care for all the troops down there. So we have Air Force troops, a few Marines and mostly Army down there and we do like care for them as well as run missions across the neighboring countries like Guatemala, Panama and then just several areas in Honduras. Just providing care to the local population who may not have the opportunity to make it to a hospital or get anything, any sort of medical care. So that's kind of like our main focus as far as being down here. We're asked to be here because we have a lot of training in trauma environments and things like that and so we're here to help teach as well as learn from the other countries.