 Our purpose is basically to support TA al-Qaim for the soldiers on this base and also for the special operators conducting operations around Syria and al-Qaim to be here as a damage control resuscitation and also to help with the surgical assets that we're co-partnered with. So we have a unit called Waugram which is our French counterparts and they were conducting a mass CAS drill and they asked to include us in that. We were happy to do that so they brought us four patients after they took care of them in their role one facility and then we ran four patients through our tent. I think the mindset you have to have is that you just have to be prepared for whatever come your way at any hour of the night and that involves us being one organized within and disciplined to know where we're at, have our gear staged and then to train for every scenario throughout the day. Patient in our doors, that patient is leaving in a better condition than when they got here. For the coalition forces getting to a higher echelon of care and for ISAF partners knowing that we're probably the best medical capabilities in the area and that we're giving them the best shot for survival in the future is an amazing feeling. I can't compare it to anything else.