 I'm the first lieutenant Murray, ground intelligence officer. First officer? Yep. Adam. Okay. Yeah, so we were conducting a pre-deployment site survey. The intent of that is to first and foremost validate our plan so to ensure that the range in the facilities are suitable for us to be able to use them, ensure that we have all the requisite information that we need to be able to conduct like safe, live-fire training, and to also ensure that we understand any sort of stipulations that our partner nations have being that we're using their own training facilities, and it's different from working over in the states or over in Okinawa or Hawaii. Right, so the site survey that we did yesterday was for the Mt. Training Site, so for us to conduct urban non-live-fire training, as well as we plan to do a couple of land navigation packages, as well as some other small-unit training. The other site surveys that we've done are in support of the amphibious assault that we'll be conducting here in a few weeks, as well as an aerial insert which will ultimately culminate in a long 20 kilometer ground infiltration. Yeah, I would say the amphibious assault with the ground infiltration is going to be a culminating event. It's going to be kind of the work of a lot of training and planning that we'll be executing over the next week, week and a half. It's an opportunity to work with our bilateral partners, the Rock Marine Corps, to ensure that we maintain lethality as well as we're able to solidify and codify some of our SOPs that we've been training and planning for over the past six to twelve months. Yes, so throughout the entirety of all the sites that we surveyed, we'll be working with the rock marines specifically for the amphibious assault. We anticipate that the rock marines will be using their AAVs to conduct the ship to shore movement and then we will also work some fast roping as well as some LZ inserts with our Rock Marine Corps counterparts. I'm Gunnar Sarn Fraser and I'm the S3 Operations Chief for Camp Mujik. You say your first name for me? Brandon Fraser. Okay. So we took 3-3 out to give them a better idea of the layout and the time and space that they'll be operating in at the beaches and then obviously at the mount training facility that they'll be utilizing gives them a first-hand look of what they're capable of doing. So when they go back and breathe their marines, they're able to come up with a better scheme maneuver with their commander and their baton commanders. So there we're going to be working with the Rock 23 Battalion. They'll be doing unilateral training as well as bilateral training at these events. So what we do at Camp Mujik, we just make sure that the marines, then when they come over from UDP or off ship, that they have everything they need and we're that liaison with the Victor 33 as it is here right now and the Rock Marines. So I am the liaison for our Marine Corps units or Army units that come over and then we have a Korean liaison officer who works with the Rock Marines. Right now the Rock Marine Corps and our Marine Corps is obviously, they're pretty similar to set up this very basic similar structure and then they work well together, they operate the same, they talk a lot of the same language. It's just that actual speaking language that becomes difficult difficulties. So that's why we had these liaison officers. Yeah, so we work hand in hand, we ask a lot of questions, anything that we can't facilitate for them, they're able to facilitate for us and vice versa. Yeah, so anytime everybody comes out here, they're really excited to work with Rock Marines, see what they're capable of because it's not something to do back in the state side.