 This RAGE event is important today because it showcases each squadron's ability to rapidly produce combat-ready aircraft. However, this is the first time that we've worked with other FSEs, including AMO, and then we brought Camp Darby in, and even the helicopters coming down. They're building a gun. Also, it's just it's a it's a very large event. Camp Darby is contributing to the RAGE exercise by showing that we can provide munitions anywhere anytime during contingency operations. We've provided eight complete round GBU-31 version three munitions. It's good to showcase that we're here, we're actually around, and we have the biggest bomb dump in U-Safie. We're gonna be building two GBU-31B3s. You're gonna start with your fuse, get your fuse settings right, and then you're gonna move on to the tail kit. Then we'll put on our hardback assembly. Then we'll move to the strakes, get those torqued down. Each team has six members, five from AMO, and then one from weapons. I think this is our first RAGE competition where we're adding in one weapons group. This prepares AMO troops to to get us ready in case of a deployment that we have hands-on experience, and we know what we're doing when we're out there. This is the first time that it's been so big. There's been other ICT integrating combat turns where the jet will pull up after it's dropped its munitions. It'll come up to the spot, be reloaded, and refueled, and immediately takes off without the pilot ever getting out or the engine shutting down. So we'll be simulating refueling and reloading the jet so it could taxi off back to the runway. What ICT is basically is to have a small group of people go to anywhere anytime and essentially do a quick turnaround of the jet so it'll drop. It'll get refueled and reloaded and fly back out to the continued munitions.