 I would say the intensity of NTC is off the charts. You're not going to get any training anywhere else in the world like this. They call it the premier training site in the world. What they see here, there's a range of temperatures, there's a range of terrain, and it's something that they're going to have to deal with downrange. You know, all the places we can go, the different climates. You see a lot of it here, depending on what time of year it is. So everything they do here prepares them for downrange. The first thing we tell these JTACs that come here is this is not a cast exercise. It's an integration exercise. So you come here to build relationships and better yourself to deploy with your partners downrange. I'd say this is very advantageous. Their days here in the box are going to be a lot harder than some of the days they see downrange. Their enemy here with the op forces. The op forces do this 10 times a year. This is their backyard. So they're fighting an enemy in their backyard. Everything they do has been seen before. So there's going to be mistakes. There's going to be growing pains. They're going to be getting beat down. So when they go downrange, if they are getting beat down, they'll be ready for it and they'll know how to overcome it. For the most part, they're coming here with the units they're aligned with, so they will be deploying with them shortly after. There are some augment T slots, but for the most part, all these people that are here are going to be deploying together down the road. The relationships built here are essential. It gives you that bond between the partners you're working with. So you're not trying to build something when you're already downrange. That way, when you're going out as a JTAC, you know who your ground commander is, you know who your fire's officer is, and you know you can trust them if you're out in the field and you call it for fires or you call it for support, they're going to have your back.