 Exercise Red Dagger is a bilateral exchange between the United States Marine Corps Reserve and between 1-3-1 commando unit. We share best practices between the British unit and our unit so we can get better combat engineers out of the process. There's been a range of different activities which they've learned and developed over the last two weeks. The bottom line is interoperability is the way forward. It's the way we're going to be operating in the future so this is really the future of our training. The land navigation is employed by the British commando units tend to focus more on orientation so they move very quickly over the terrain and they will tend to shoot from terrain feature to terrain feature as opposed to maybe navigating specific asmets like we tend to do. The Royal Marines use an obstacle course that's quite a bit longer than ours, a lot more distance between obstacles. More use of water obstacles, obviously our obstacle course doesn't have any. Their obstacle course is just one test of many tests north of them during the commando qualification. The British units and the Royal Marines have a group called Mountain Leaders that are highly trained in mountain warfare so they came in and gave us a one-day training package on basically ascending and descending, sheer cliffs and just very difficult mountainous terrain. Utilizing steel I-beams and wood planking, we built a non-standard bridge. Following the construction of the bridge we were actually able to go down to demo range and place the bridge and detonate it. The detonation was successful, they completely destroyed it. So one of the things we were trying to accomplish in this training period was to take them back to basic MOS skills but also basic marine skills. So we set some time up in the schedule in order to do platoon and company level attacks. It's been about a three-day package so we've been assaulting essentially urban objectives in addition to doing reconnaissance patrols, moving the contact patrols. In this day and age being able to fight with different forces and allies is a key for modern battles and a chance to work with the Americans and get used to using different skills and working together is really important I think. This is an exercise that definitely needs to be continued because there's so much value with learning from the Royal Engineers and how they do things and there's such a professional organization that any time we can get our junior Marines to interact with them there's always going to be value. I really enjoy working with the Americans, all of them have got really good characters and it's been fantastic to see them develop themselves over the last two weeks. Hopefully this relationship continues in the future because it's a brilliant opportunity.