 What do you want now? Right now on The Angle. My name is Lieutenant Commander Cale Nichols. I'm a Staff LSO with the Aero Wing. LSO stands for Landing Signal Officer. Another name for that is CAG Paddles. I serve on board the USS Ronald Reagan, which is for deploy to Yakuza, Japan. And CBW-5 has been at Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni for just over a year now. We finished fixed wing, squatter move down there in 2018. The Aero Wing enjoys being there and it's a great location to operate out of. And to me, CBW-5 is valuable in this part of the world to provide security and stability. When I think of CBW-5, we're kind of that air element, that air piece of solving that puzzle. So I think the impact in accomplishing that mission is the fact that, you know, we can be on station, you know, within a day's time, whatever the call comes. We're there as opposed to a cone of space, the air wing or carrier. We can be here on station quite quickly. Yeah, keeping the aircraft to airborne for CBW-5 is 24-7 missions. Some flight ops, it takes dozens of people up on the flight deck and probably just about the same, standing watch stations below the flight deck. All that comes together and one workers shuttle to launch and recover hundreds of aircraft on an aircraft carrier a day. I think an aviator should come to seventh fleet for the value of the mission that we serve out here. So the forward presence that seventh fleet that FDNF provides, this AOR, very important in providing security and stability for the region. So being a part of that has a lot of personal reward with what you provide to that team. As an aviator, you'll get experiences, I think, that cone of space, the air wings and ships won't necessarily get the traveling and visiting. Our partner nations out here is also a huge benefit. So I think all those combined are the primary reasons why I would recommend aviators coming out to the seventh fleet.