 The purpose of our exercise is to conduct an advanced aerogunnery progressing from the individual level all the way up through platoon level maneuver, both day and night conditions. And that involves an exercise with our manned crews as well as our unmanned crews. But it's more than just conducting the actual gunnery. It's also the planning and the preparation that goes on at the troop level to exercise and integrate all the enablers that you need to sustain and execute this maneuver. Our 15 Romeo has been keeping the aircraft up and running to a tee and our MTPs and our pilots have been pushing through any adversity out here. So realistically, whatever we face, our pilots and our crew chiefs get through it. Some of the things that we've achieved so far, we've shot gunnery tables four, five, six and then went through eight and nine just last night. So one of the lessons we've learned since I've come out here is there are lots of things you can't control. Wind and weather and kind of the environment being one of them. But there are lots of things you can control, mainly how much you plan the mission execution and how confident you are in executing the plan you helped to create.