 People, whether it's intentional or accidental, it's our primary concern. So, as a general SOEs, even before we do the exercise, we already know that combined operations is inherently hard. Difficult because you're dealing with two different organizations, two different cultures, and it is good that we share almost the same doctrines when it comes to work-fighting. So, the challenges were already predetermined by us, and that is what we were working through. What you witnessed available, if you saw in the screen, the presence of the Combined Information and Execution Center, that is actually what we were practicing. It is very easy to pull the trigger on a weapon system, and that is not what we were demonstrating a while ago. What we were demonstrating was our ability to operate at the operational level, at the joint combined level, for our general and their general to come together and execute a combined operation on the laborers. Operation at this level. And from that, in addition to the President, it's what we came out with. When training at the joint combined partnership level. The vastness and complexity of technological systems, weapon systems, component services from Army, Marines, Air Force, Navy, even Coast Guard assets, all the way up to special operations forces. There's a lot of coordination, deep reflection that must happen. You copy that, that would increase technological prowess and ability to communicate across all spectrums and also operate within all levels of war, strategic operational tactics for the crisis of the conflict to include humanitarian assistance. So, learning is always happening. Every time we have the opportunity to train on a large scale element like this, we always take away the learning points more than the successes. Because the learning points will allow us to be more successful in the future in our interoperability and our relationship and partnership together for the coming years. The message that we are trying to send is that the alliance is alive and that we are always challenging ourselves. So, one Balikatan is always going to be harder and more complex than the previous Balikatan. That means that in every iteration of Balikatan, we will expect something different. We want to do this because we want to avoid stillness of the exercise and we also feel the need to challenge ourselves in able to operate at a different level for a different complexity of the exercise. Trying our hand at doing something that we've never done before. That is the challenge that we are trying to do. Because we are trying to exercise also muscles that we do not know we have. So, to answer the next question is that in every exercise that we do, the objective is really to train. We train together because we want to take advantage also of our pre-obligations. If you are going to be ordinary to risk your life for your country, you will have to take every advantage that is available to you. And the advantage that we have is that we have a meeting, we have a communication between them. It's very simple. And if I were to put it in latest terms, the Philippines and the U.S. forces have been in a partnership since the Batalan death march. From that time, all the way to 38 iterations of the bellica tan, the Philippine forces and U.S. forces have always been allies. And allies in this sense in a very simplistic way of looking at is family. We all know that nothing can break family. And in the coach of the Philippines and in the coach of the United States, sometimes family is everything. You may not see your family every day. You may not talk to your family every day. But when your family calls you, you respond. And in this case, in this family matter, we've been called upon to train together. And we learned from that. That key element of partnership and resolve is far stronger than any other measures that tend to promise, any other measure of exploding targets or any other measure of offensive and defensive capability. The resolve in partnership is far stronger than any technical element that we have. And that's the true message of bellica tan. In translation, shoulder to shoulder, that doesn't mean weapon to weapon. It really means family. Thank you.