 Our course effects is our opportunity as VLT-35, not just demonstrate that we can persist inside the weapons engagement zone, inside the first island chain, but also that we can execute our operations, intel, and fires via the command control that is light, mobile, and low-signature via four M-raisers. That's going to be a critical capability as we expand our influence and disrupt the enemy's targeting efforts throughout the first island chain. It also assures our allies because we can distribute and very quickly execute crisis response. It should have been required, should we end up going from the competition to crisis to conflict situation very rapidly. This exercise was designed to test Italian and EAVO environment using small units to combat a soft force in the jungle. This is our last field-op that we're doing here in Okinawa. The purpose of this field-op is to show the Marine Corps how a unit can respond and how fast they can respond and how they would fight in case of any actions from our enemies. We successfully infiltrated into the CTA and conducted an air assault into the NTA. Desperate spurs in small units throughout the NTA and engaged a soft force. We know we need to infiltrate, we know we need to seize key maritime terrain, and we know that we need to go immediately execute the war-fighting functions associated with the Italian, where we're not going to do a depointment model, but we're going to have to employ immediately from our bases and stations here in Okinawa. So our command and control, logistics, fires, and intelligence all needs to be executed and supported, while at the same time, if your company is in the tunes and moving out immediately for an operational employment. We just need to focus on being in the basics, squad actions, command control, we're asking a lot of squad leaders, how do they call for fire in the jungle, how do they get the patrols into place, how do they sustain, but they don't have the company's COC or battalion support that we're used to having throughout the last 20 years. The train is extremely tough, visibility is very limited, just the conditions really wear you down. It creates a really unique challenge operating in the jungle. It's really a rifleman's game, but I think as we kind of incorporate more ammunition, precision fires, and kind of shorten, you know, close the gap, I want to come to fire support in the jungle.