 Mountain Roundup has been a very unique exercise with us working with the German Air Force. They've been providing us with some good air support. The German JTACs have been very professional. They've been able to, with this range, operate with a lot of freedom and get a lot of unique training and evolution done. Initially, while we were here in the first place, the German Air Force right now is training new weapons instructors on the tornado fighter bomber. And part of that is also the training in a more or less complex close air support environment. And in these close air support environments, we as the Joint German Attack Controllers are the ones who provide the coordination and correlation with the ground troops. So basically we're supporting that training for the new weapons instructors. The training out here, training areas are fantastic for decentralized operations. So imagine an infantry battalion in their own fire support section trolling a battle space. There's a foreign nation adjacent to it. By attaching the English code to that foreign nation, you bring the MAGTAPs fires to that nation. We can enhance an entire battalion's fire support capability by bringing Joint Allied Coalition aircraft in addition to our indirect fire assets. And that's how we really find ourselves operating in the joint environment. Here at Mountain Roundup we're definitely getting the training we need. So we're doing a variety of missions. For instance, today we just did a trap mission where we would, we notionally rescued a down pilot. We're also working on our infantry skills and also of course we're working on our CAS platforms with fast air and then we're also calling in notional artillery. So it's pretty much an all-around spread of exactly what we do.