 The most special thing about our soldiers is just their adaptability. They are truly versatile, no matter what the challenge is, they will come up with a solution. Whether we have the equipment right there or not, whether we have the training or not, they're going to figure it out. And I think that's unique to engineers in general, and then especially so with the dive field. Out here, this is all about fostering the joint relationship between the Albanians and the American divers. And larger than the divers that the countries themselves. You know, we're kind of ambassadors to them, they're ambassadors to us. So it's all about joint ops and getting more integrated with our force partners. It's important to be able to integrate together because it's really a small world. Even though our militaries are quite large, the dive communities are very small. And on various missions, deployments throughout my career, I have come across the same people over and over again. So forging those relationships early is really the key to it and learning to communicate. Although there's a language barrier, once we get underwater, most of us speak the same language through hand signals. But learning that integration piece early makes it easier when you need it for something more serious. The Army does have divers. Yes, the Army has divers!