 We're here in Slovenia for doing a medical engagement piece with our Balkan coalition partners and we practiced a mass casualty scenario with our coalition forces here, the Macedonians and Kosovo medical providers, and we've done an integrated trauma response in our expeditionary medical setup here for the Air Force. We saw simulated patients, trauma event, and we were able to respond through the training that we've gotten here to work together seamlessly to take care of patients in the same manner that we would take care of them in the States. Being able to work with our army partners, our Navy partners is super important because we all go about things just a little bit differently and it can be just different enough to make an actual difference. So getting out here working together and kind of bridging that gap is super important because you never know how long you're going to have to get ready for something terrible to happen and we got to be ready. As we move forward, there's a lot of things going on around the world and there's a lot of different countries, a lot of our allies or NATO allies that are going to be involved in it. So if we need to respond to a crisis, whether it is a terrorist attack or a humanitarian mission or combat, we need to all kind of work together and be good at working together. And I think missions like this are very, very helpful for that. Now we all know how to work together, how to communicate what we need, what we expect, that kind of thing. We do this better than anyone else in the world. When you take a look at our survivability rate out of the theater over the last 16 years of war and our ability to be able to take this type of capability, stand it up in locations all over the world and be ready to treat patients inside of 12 hours is pretty remarkable.