First, we have a very good understanding of what is ongoing and what's happening, driven in large part by the relationships we have across the western hemisphere, and not just with U.S. NORTHCOM and SOUTHCOM, but with different federal departments. The Department of Public Safety is connected to the Department of Homeland Security and across the western hemisphere to different agencies and departments. So we actually know what's going on.
As to acting against the challenge, you touched on our task groups. Actually, it's much deeper than that. It's an ongoing task called Operation Caribe, where we provide ships and surveillance aircraft—and it has been in the newspapers already—to a multinational organization that is fighting the TCOs, transnational criminal organizations, the transnational cartels both in the Caribbean and the Pacific. We do it for about seven or eight months of the year, provide ships and surveillance aircraft to differing degrees. Their task is to interdict any drugs moving up in the maritime environment. It's been extremely successful. Those ships then are packaged together with other nationalities—be it U.K., be it Dutch, be it French—in those regions, to be able to stop and deter any movement of drugs north into North America.
We continue to do that to actually be successful. We have that situational awareness of what's going on, as other federal departments have that awareness with their counterparts.