 I am extremely happy with where things are right now. This is my third BTF actually this year. This is my first time to the European Theater. So far we have been, we've crushed every high headquarters director mission that we've had. We've currently gone 27 for 27 sorties, which is awesome. The P-18 that's been out here, especially Combat Cam, has done a fantastic job capturing what the team both in the air are doing, but also the team on the ground. It is a full team effort to get that score cut. Everyone from our mission support group team, our communications folks, send up the comms, our Perceco team getting us in process, our maintainers on the ramp getting the jets green, getting the parts in from our little air logisticians, as well as the air crew and obviously yourselves, up in the air actually executing the mission and taking pictures of it. So I must admit our hosts have been phenomenal here. We could not have asked for much more. Colonel Said and the 11th group, basically the base commanders here at Morone Air Base, have been very welcoming, they've been very accommodating. We've been able to integrate with some of the local mayors as well, they've came out, they've toured the airplane. We've had multiple static tours to again explain the bomber mission. Just the geography of where Spain is located and it's theater as well is perfect. We've been able to go to AFRICOM, we've been all over UCOM since we've been here. We've been integrating with all our allies and the NATO construct. We've also flown some incredible sorties. We were able to honor the Fallen of D-Day by overflying Semir-Aglise, which was a huge honor, I was on that flight, that's probably one of one of our favorite flights. We also did Allied Sky, we were able to fly over all 28 nations that are out here, at least our NATO members, and integrate with all their fighters. There was over 90-plus fighters that came out from, I believe it was 21 of the nations to escort us through their airspace, which was absolutely phenomenal. So the experience that the aircrew get from that by talking on the radios to foreign countries, transiting through international airspace, you just can't get that train anywhere else. What I think some of the highlights that this BTF accomplished, we actually brought weapons with us for this BTF, that means the Munz team comes out, they help load the airplanes, the very first week we went and integrated with some Latvia and JTACs in Latvia, which is exceptional, so we were able to drop some high-explosive ordnance there in the Yukon AOR, then later on we were able to go into the African AOR and work with some of our allies there in the African AOR as well by dropping some inert weapons with some of their ground parties as well. So obviously whenever we can bring weapons and practice that skill set with our allies, that's always a big plus. Also, like I said, I've already mentioned Allied Sky, that was a very, very awesome sortie that we did, but we've been doing that pretty much at least two to three times a week, doing high-vis integration exercises with our allies and just basically showing that the long-range strike capability can be launched from Spain throughout anywhere in this part of the world, and then obviously recover back. This airfield is well suited for us, so it's been a very, very successful BTF so far. It's also the first time that both have been out here in about five years, I believe, so it's kind of good to exercise the great matter to figure out how we're going to get B-52 operations out of this base, ID some of the areas that might need some more improvement, and then also obviously some of the successes, the pros and the cons associated with the base. The whole construct of a bomber task force is to be a little bit more flexible, a little bit more agile, go to areas where we don't normally operate out of and prove that we can actually still launch long-range strike out of those areas. So obviously typically we'd go to Fairford, we'd go to Guam, those are very established bases, so what was unique about this one is that it didn't come to a base that hadn't had bombers operate out of it for a long time and still be extremely successful, which again is a testament to the entire team that came out here with us. I would fully anticipate, just based on the geography of where Morone Air Base is located in the U-Com and Africom AOR, that bomber operations could come back to this base easy. Like I said, I've got to just throw a shout out to the whole team that's been out here. Like I said, we don't get the scorecard that we've had, that we get out here without every aim and contributing to that mission. We've had a very, very focused mission set. Everyone has been fully linked into the mission, both on the flight line, both in the back shops, in AFV weather, our SAMS team. Everyone that is associated with the mission has had their eyes on the mission and has been felt a part of the mission. All the documentaries that you all have been doing on those, I really appreciate that's on DVDs because again it just shows the impact that they have on how crucial every airman is to a bomber task force. We really do bring everybody for a reason, and if anybody fails, the whole BTF can be in jeopardy. So the fact that the entire team has been out here has been so successful. It's just a testament to every airman that has come on this BTF.