First of all, madame, I don't think we will see repeated events like that, because the Afghans, and in this case the Ministry of Justice, which had responsibility for that prison and the security of it, are learning some very painful lessons and have already learned some very painful lessons. They are taking measures to ensure that at other places around the country this kind of thing cannot occur or would be much more difficult to implement.
Secondly, it is their responsibility to secure their prisons. We will work with them over these next days and weeks to ensure that security is at the right level for anything in Kandahar province and to help ensure that this kind of thing doesn't occur again. They've learned a lot of lessons already. As we go through these next days and weeks and do the complete analysis of the kind of attack that took place, we'll help them learn some more lessons.
The one thing we know is that it was a massive truck-borne bomb that hit the wall of that prison and blew it open. That would have caused shock and dismay and destruction and death for a large area around it. It certainly helped create the conditions for many of those prisoners to escape.
We'll go through it with them. We'll support the Afghans as they learn the lessons on how to prevent this kind of thing from occurring again. We'll support them in improving the security of the prisons for which they have responsibility. That specifically is not our responsibility, but we want to work with them in the immediate area around there to make sure we can help them improve it.
Again, I would say we're not perfect. The enemy does have a vote. At times, they can achieve some surprise and get an attack through, as they clearly did in this case. We'll simply work with the Afghans that much harder to make sure the chances of it occurring again are reduced.
I come back to that same point. We used to have a rule in the units where I worked. Rule one was to focus on the enemy, and we do. The enemy has a vote; we want to make sure that vote can't be exercised very often.