 I think they're doing well, I mean they have come a long way since they jumped in here on the 5th of October and this was the first airborne operation of its type for this organization since essentially since they jumped into Iraq. Again because of that tempo and that pace of deployments they haven't focused tremendously on kind of the large package, tactical airborne operations that we saw on the 5th of October. So just the fact that they were able to put that all together, jump in this environment, really when you think about where they're based between three different locations with the heavy drop platforms, bundles and then almost a thousand paratroopers I think was pretty incredible. It was synchronized, it went pretty much in accordance with their plan so I think it went extremely well. There's been learning points all along since then, we found ourselves initially in an analog environment so again we were doing things that we were not used to doing, tracking on maps with pushpins and markers and most of us are used to falling into an environment that's very mature with digital systems where one guy gets up out of the seat and the next guy sits down so again kind of going through some old skills that some of us that have been in the Army a little longer were used to but they've come a long way with that and they've done an impressive job in getting their systems up and they're certainly a learning organization, they've taken a lot of the lessons learned throughout stuff that's been brought up in the AARs and they really find it and they are truly getting better.