 So we have multiple options across all this blue water, right? We're just kind of a one-trick pony, but we can do operations by air and by sea. That allow us multiple capabilities to get out and project power. You know, within our own task force, it's the 593 ESC. Transportation, movement control teams, and HR from resource perspective. The 8th TSC with Army Watercraft, that allow us to project power out of Navy base, out to the outer islands. Really to allow us to test a lot of the things at the multi-domain task force. We're doing this part of Forger 21 with large and in the Air Force. So it's the whole enterprise that came together to make this a reality, to allow us to preserve combat power and project combat power multimodal by both air and sea. So just the partnerships with the other branches were so very vital for this. By coming out here, operating with our joint force really just built our understanding of how we're going to operate. We're going to train as we fight and we're going to fight as a joint force. So we have to operate that way. For this exercise, we moved out here, we had to move all of our equipment. We understood the challenges of operating with Army Watercraft at great distances. We had to understand the challenges of operating at a naval port. Doing those operations, onload, offload of vessels to get our equipment here. Operating from an air base where we doubled the population of the air base and how do we share those resources. Especially when you have the threat of Typhoon or the threat of COVID. I mean, all of those are great lessons for us and I think they will feed into future exercises. Forger and Defender Pacific started with just a small ADVON course in late June and really grew to up over 5,000 Army forces across the Indo-Pacific. It gave us an opportunity to test some of our capabilities in a live environment. So it was an incredible opportunity to work through all the pieces of the joint environment and really I think it showcased what Army capabilities can do in the Pacific.