No, there is no intent to pre-assign missions to a nation or a group of nations. The intention is to ensure all the aspects of smart defence. But globally in the future, the alliance will have the capabilities needed to fulfill the missions that our heads of sitting government will decide upon. Right now we don't know what these operations will be, so what we concentrate on is making sure that the alliance—again, the 28 members—will have the capabilities needed to meet the level of ambition. As you know, that means that we need to be able to perform two major joint operations, as we call them, and six small joint operations, as we call them, which can be in one domain—air or maritime or land only, but on a small-scale. We do not designate a specific potential adversary. We have a definition from a political level of what a major operation or a small operation means, and then we work on this to defend the capabilities needed.
It's up to the nations to decide what they want their own defence institution to look like. We try to bring the global coherence. This is why it's very important that we coordinate and that we exchange views among the member nations on possible, I would say, important evolutions in the defence institutions, so that we can then coordinate and make sure that we keep the global coherence of the alliance.