 This is a proficiency airborne operation that we're doing today with our NATO partners in L.A.s. This training is important for a couple of reasons. It really gives us a chance to hone our craft as paratroopers and to really build our technical expertise in what we're expected to do. It's important for a couple of reasons. Really it builds trust in each other and it gives us an opportunity to have a common purpose to achieve together as a collective unit. The benefit really comes down to, I think it boils down to one thing and that really is relationships. Being able to establish those connections early and often and really build that relationship and capacity is important. It feels reassuring. It's reassuring to know that other allies and partners have the same drive and determination that you do to really achieve a common purpose together and to do hard things together. So with our NATO allies specifically it builds trust in each other and also gives us an opportunity to achieve a common purpose in a kind of a lower scale. And there's also value in understanding the technical nuances to other partners airborne operations techniques and procedures. I think it's really important to work together to get more interoperability in working together because you see the word can change any day and it goes sometimes faster than we all thought before. So we have to train together to be ready if we have to stand together. We came here together today with the 173rd guys and also the Italians to jump out of aircraft. For airborne troops it's always fun. The weather is absolutely nice here in Italy and so we are really excited to jump out of the aircraft with you guys together. You know in the airborne troops wherever you come from and it doesn't matter what's your religion, what's your rank, where you're from, we all jump out together over aircraft and that's more than a partnership, it's a brotherhood, that's airborne life.