 The young marine come into the Marine Corps for one reason because they want to deploy. They want to be part of something better than bigger than themselves and do what they need to for addressing the crisis that affect the United States of America. Electricity Force 21 is going to be our core concept for the future and it's a capstone concept which basically builds upon our previous concepts that we've had out there from ship to objective maneuver, operational maneuver from the sea and sea basing and it's actually going to be the capstone for that, to pull them all together. It's going to refocus our marines back from the time that we've spent in Iraq and Afghanistan and get them refocused on excursion operations particularly from the sea. All to be able to provide that combatant commander with the right force at the right place at the right time. We're going to put a renewed focus on the marine excursion brigade so that brigade can be more of a middle weight force so that means it can box down or it can box up so that it's going to be more focused across the complete range of military operations from humanitarian assistance to disaster relief, low intensity conflict operations, all the way to being a premier warfighter for forceful entry operations. So it'll be focusing on the capability that the med can bring by combining the forces that are already forward. I think that what they're going to see is that they're going to be positioned forward a lot more than they had in the past. We're going to be looking for ways to get them more on amphibious ships. They're going to be disaggregated around the theater so there will be a lot more responsibility that will be put on these marines. They're going to get better training within the school houses and get better preparation so that they can be that force of readiness that our nation demands. The marines that we're going to have that are forward stationed, forward deployed, they're going to be the ones that are going to be closest to the scene. To begin to set up command and control, to begin to go ahead and integrate all the agencies that are coming in to assist with it and also help organize the other countries that are coming in to make sure that whatever forces they're bringing, whatever supplies, activities that they bring that they can be coordinated into the bigger picture. Once again it's returning back to our exposure roots, you know, getting lighter, faster or more mobile, you know, to make sure that we've got the, you know, the strategic agility that we need, the operational reach and the tactical flexibility to operate across the full range of military operations. The key on addressing humanitarian assistance and disaster relief operation is just being ready because you never know when it's going to happen. It's just something that you aren't looking to have happen but when it does happen you need to be prepared to, you know, be that, you know, the force of choice that's going to get out there to go ahead and make something happen and it's getting there as quickly as you can that's going to make a difference. It's all about when you have today's crisis, you're going to address it with today's force and you're going to do it today.