Well, as I said before, from my point of view, this is not a military operation. The actual purpose is to try to restore Afghanistan, and the military are there to provide security.
I can't speak in the global sense of what's going on in Kabul. The president came on TV, where I saw him just as you probably did. He asked for calm and was suggesting that some of the people involved in the riot were, whatever the term was, troublemakers. So I don't know what's behind it. There was legitimate outrage at the time when the local person was killed by the convoy. I don't know if the riot reflects any systemic problem there.
I can tell you about our own area, because I do get feedback. Our forces are very popular in the area they're in. The various little villages and the people around them appreciate our being there. I think it's our years and years of dealing in other countries and other cultures that we have, as it were, a lighter touch. We don't take polls there, but the reports I'm getting are that they appreciate the Canadians being there. I think in our area we are winning the hearts and minds, and that's of course what we're going to be concentrating on in Kandahar.