 When you join the Air Force, you kind of think about, you know, go around, see the world, or get in a combat aircraft. But you never really think, you know, you're going to be in command of what essentially equates to a city of people. I was pulled down here to help these people about four days ago, do some good work as the pod boss for pod two. Allies Refuge is our effort, our task, our operation to get as many people out of Afghanistan out of harm's way and move them somewhere safe. Our primary purpose out here is to maintain safety, security, care and feeding of these people in preparation for their next step, wherever that next step might be. What I do is I oversee the medical, I oversee the logistics, the care feeding, the civil engineering requirements, the security requirements, all those people report to me so that we can try to organize our efforts in the most efficient way possible, getting after not only the commander's intent, but really what these people need. My wife has been extremely supportive of me, I mean obviously the long hours are a little bit tough, but every day I get home, she gives me a hug and you know she says this is good work that you're doing and that's meaningful. And what goes along with that is, you know, I've got a group of people here that are doing the same thing. We all want to do the right thing and we all want to get this done in a way that it maximizes the number of people that we can save and that provides a lot of stability. I'm incredibly proud of the work that we're doing here. I'm incredibly proud of the type of response that this base has done and it really helps you remember who the good guys in this situation are. You know you come out here and you see these faces, that's 3,000 people that are going to have a chance at a better life.