 When a Marine or a sailor is injured, they don't care what uniform you're wearing. They don't care if they look up and they see Mar-Pats, Type 3s or Coveralls. They care about if they're going to live, if they're going to see their family again. The patient is at the center of every training that we do because the patient doesn't care if that medical provider is uncomfortable. A firebreak is unique to this part of the country. You see them everywhere on Camp Pendleton. It is made by causing some kind of trauma to the natural area. This trauma to the land brings forth a greater purpose. A man-made firebreak is created to stop or slow the progression of wildfires. One of the most uncontrollable forces of our human existence. We all participate in Operation Firebreak today because we are all a part of the collective firebreak within our Navy Marine Corps team. So we are all prepared when the time comes and to be the physical barrier between life and death if it comes to us. And because a firebreak exists, precious cities, towns, homes and people are protected. Participating today is weapons platoon from Second Battalion First Marines. Our ERSS roll-to-light maneuver team that is deploying within the next week. And Fleet Surgical Team 5. In a real life scenario we hope that we don't have casualties but a ground combat element would potentially take casualties and that corpsman or that CLS Marine would perform TCCC and transport to their BAS or a roll-one entity. In this case for today they are going to our roll-to-light maneuver team who is currently training to do austere medicine in this environment. They're able to do damage control surgery, damage control resuscitation and blood resuscitation as well. So in this scenario of firebreak today the casualties are transported via our MV-22 simulator to a Fleet Surgical Team who is on board our ship simulator to continue to stabilize that patient and potentially hold them. And the firebreak does not know the difference between Mar-Pats, Type 3s or Coveralls. It's a united front of teams that train together, integrate together and learn the capabilities of our teammates. Today we have Expeditionary Medicine, Marine Corps Ground Combat Element and Fleet Side Assets training together because this is what the future fight will demand of us. The professionals of Second Battalion First Marines and many others in this room already know what that fight feels like and have come here today knowing how important this mission is and to be a part of our nation's firebreak against all enemies. There's a saying by our leadership that says get real, get better and part of training is getting real about what your true capability is and by acknowledging our deficits, by acknowledging even what we're good at we can get better and that's not just individually, not just within a roll-to-light maneuver, even within a roll one, Corman and his CLS Marines, get real about your capability and then get better.