 They only have two lefts, so I'm just gonna be... They have lefts. What? What did you say they had lefts? They only have an AT-4. No I'm not! Alright, it's gonna have to do. I know. Yeah, I actually saw them grow. Push down, push down, push down. Hey, push to your left, push to your left, push to your left. That's the tip of something doesn't get to the right, they're right there. Hey, slow down, slow down. One shot at the one side. I sustain a gunshot. One, two, three. Alright, Saber Junction 23 is the incorporation of second cavalry regiment with a Polish higher command that happens to be the 11th armor division over here from Poland and components of their units underneath them is what comprises the division staff. So the interoperability piece is what we're trying to get after. How does a Polish headquarters command and control a U.S. cavalry regiment with other multinational partners within that regiment as well? 2CR is America's forward recon element located in Europe and so if anything was to be activated in a deterrence kind of standpoint then we would look at 2CR to provide that recon asset along with other units we rotate through Europe for the rapid action force. So exercises like Saber Junction allow us to provide that environment where a U.S. cavalry regiment and a Polish division can have the decision space and understanding between each other and how that division would answer to a multinational corps to meet the needs and provide those trained and ready units to defend Europe.