 Walt, you've been here for two years, responsible for training in Europe. You've been our deputy commander. You've seen everything there is about the Army in Europe. What does Europe offer in terms of leader development opportunities, training, and helping our great alliance? Well, sir, I think the U.S. Army of Europe is more relevant today than I think we've ever been. I mean, the challenges we face today are a result of our success since we've been here. There's a great opportunity now to come and train, live, and work with our allies. I think the number one lesson that I've learned since being here is that nations don't have relationships. People do. And here in U.S. Army of Europe, you get to work side by side every single day with some of the best armies and within the greatest alliance in the form. When you were the commander at Graffinvere for the Joint Multinational Training Center, I watched you change the culture and the attitude there so that that great training center became NATO ready. What are the kind of things that you had to do to make the best training center on the continent ready for helping our alliance? I think first we just had to understand we don't know what the future holds. As we've been told, it's unknown and unknowable, but we do know we won't do it alone. We're going to do it with our allies. And if we're going to fight and deploy together, then we need to train, live, and work together. And that's what really we started with. And what we found is that our allies, we were all in the same situation. They were coming out of a long war. Our nations are cutting our budgets. And it would have been easy to just go home and defend yourself, or defend the budget cuts in your own nation. But what we found is we really have probably the most experienced force with any alliance that we've ever had. And it was easy to come together, and by doing so we actually create, I think, a much more well-trained and professional force than we've ever had. The Army's operating concept, when in a complex world, obviously depends on adaptive leaders. It's clear that that's at the core of the Army operating concept. What does serving in Europe offer in terms of leader development opportunities? Well, I think the Chief of Staff of the Army said it best when he said, if you want to know what the future looks like, go see US Army Europe, because we're facing it every day. Multiple dilemmas from hybrid threats and in different adversaries are challenging us every day. So if you want to be prepared for the future, you've got to train with your allies against this type of future threat. And that's what we offer here, not just at Graffenbeer and Hohenfels, which is really the crown jewel of training areas, but also within the Eastern European countries and operational antiquities all. We're training side-by-side to build that assurance that creates the deterrence against any adversary that you're thinking about taking on the alliance. It's your little mission, man. Thank you, sir. Thank you, sir.