 The Department of the Navy released its proposed $155.8 billion budget for Fiscal Year 2014, April 10th. Rear Admiral Joseph Malloy, Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Budget, talked about the Navy and Marine Corps portion of the budget, which was a $4.2 billion decrease from last year. We are deploying forward. We are continuing to support all the forces forward. We are preparing all the ships and Marines to deploy in 14 and doing as much of the ship maintenance in 15 as we can to support all those operations. So where are the slowdowns? There are two airwings, as was spoken first in this morning. One of them is at minimum safety flying. The other one will transition from safety flying. Across the full expeditionary helicopter force and Marine Corps force, there's another couple hundred million dollars of reductions of training. This year's budget submission was guided by the CNO's Tenants of War Fighting First, operate forward and be ready. Rear Admiral Malloy said the Navy is funding our forces operating forward, providing money to maintain and train those units getting ready to deploy, and investing in the people, ships, and technology of our future force. 980 people for F-18G, Grawler Squadrons, and they're trading for that, and I'll share the airplane buys for that one, which Mr. Hill talked about. We also have about a thousand personnel for LCS crews and instructors, and about a thousand personnel for what we call a combination of cyber and then IA, the individual accounts, which even though I'm buying a billet ashore, it actually helps see, because it pays for that person when they're going to school, so I actually don't have to take as many gaps as see. So it's kind of unusual. I buy essentially what's ashore billet, but it helps my seam anning. So the bottom line of the Navy is going to grow slowly over time. We've pretty much reached the point where to be able to operate with the force we have, and to be able to properly man and train, we need these forces.