 The Marines are ready, focused, and no call to action would surprise them at this moment. It is any climb in any place. We were above the Arctic Circle, and below freezing temperatures, all the way down to sunny traffic scenes. And that's what the Marine Corps is all about. That's what I'm most proud about, that when we are called, we are there, no questions asked. Exercise Ryukyu Vice is a Marine Air Control Squadron for hosted exercise aimed at increasing air intercept control proficiency across that unit. In Okinawa, the squadrons that participated largely trained to defensive counter air and offensive counter air missions. VMFA 312, trained with Marine Air Control Squadron 4, as well as VMFA 242, VMGR 152, and VAQ 131, a Navy electronic attack squadron. Joint bilateral training is extremely important for the Marine Corps. It is very rare that we would actually find ourselves in a fight all on our own, and so having that ability to train with our joint partners as well as our bilateral partners is going to be key to success on any future battlefield. Training between the TOC and Hornets and F-35s and Growlers within the Department of the Navy is essential for building tactics, techniques, and procedures, and familiarity between those squadrons. Execution of O-plan and con-plan scenarios. We stay mission ready by constantly doing the mission. There hasn't been one single month where we haven't been completing operations or training to complete those operations. We have been on the job non-stop.