 British and U.S. forces put rounds down range in Poland as part of Sabre Strike 17. We executed a fire sport coordination exercise with the Mustang troop, which is our reconnaissance company attached to the battle group. What we did was combine mortar fire, attack aviation and field artillery assets onto a single objective controlled by Mustang troops on a screen line within the training area. The allies are part of the Enhanced Forward Presence Battle Group, Poland, and train together to strengthen trust and improve their combined arms fighting capabilities. So clearly, you know, nations work alongside one another, especially in the capacity that we're in now. Clearly we're operating as one combined battle group. In order to work alongside anyone, whether or not in your own army, someone else's army, you need to have that embedded trust. If that trust isn't there, they're not going to have that same confidence going into any sort of, any form of operation that should they require something, should they require the assistance that's being offered by another nation that is actually going to be delivered. It's that ingrained trust that's actually allowing us to operate here as one unit. For Captain Cotter, the heightened pace of the Sabre Strike 17 exercise only helps the operational capability of the battle group. I think the off tempo and the readiness state that is required of us is forcing us to become better every single day. It requires guys to be wired tight 24-7. It requires us to be absolutely specific and exact in our actions day in and day out is only proving to pay off dividends for us as we're here longer. Sabre Strike 17 promotes regional stability and security while strengthening partner capabilities and fostering trust. Reporting for United States Army Europe, I'm Army Sergeant Austin Majors.