 Traditionally, Exercise Rowling Thunder is a 10th Marine-specific exercise that we do here in Fort Bragg. It gives us the opportunity to bring the whole regiment out, mass the regiment, as well as improve our ability to move and communicate over long distances. This year's iteration of Rowling Thunder is different in the fact that we are conducting a distributed operation. Having units, firing units both in Lejeune and Bragg, regimental-sized command nodes in Lejeune and Bragg, and conducting firepower, command and control across great distance. Well, what HighMars does to 10th Marines is it gives us the ability to provide longer range precision fires. Bringing in the rockets gives us the ability to reach out and touch the adversary at a longer distance and with more precision. EMBO stands for Exhibitionary Advanced Base Operations. It's about the seizing or occupying of forward positions in order to establish capabilities of warfighting functions in order to enable other units to conduct operations on other objectives. When the Marine Corps goes to fight, the active duty fights and the reservists fight with us. So any opportunity we have to integrate those Marines into our operation is merely enhancing our lethality as a Marine Corps. Whatever they're doing in their civilian life, those particular jobs and occupations also add a unique perspective to how we're operating in the active duty force. The way that 10th Marines maintains its competitive edge over our adversaries is never assuming that we have that competitive edge. The way that we move, the way that we shoot, the way that we communicate always assumes that while we are targeting, we can be targeting and we operate accordingly. The Marine Corps Field Artillery is a standards-based organization. Marines that can meet that standard, which are highly demanding and exacting, are Marines that excel in this community and in some places. We're operating and we're into accelerating.