I can certainly tell you that in Kandahar province the principal shift has been away from what you might call conventional tactics to an increase in the use of improvised explosive devices and acts of intimidation, the latter being more the work of police forces, and the former being more the work of the Afghan National Army.
Certainly we are in the process of standing up Afghan National Army counter-IED teams themselves, and EOD teams as a part of that. This may already have happened and it's something I would have to check with my colleague, Jon Vance, who is in Kandahar now.
So there is an increasing focus on the specialist skills that are required to address some of the current Taliban tactics, but the important piece is the real counter--if there was one, or if we could describe it as that--to the change in Taliban tactics is not so much shifting the way training is conducted but increasing the numbers of security forces that are present on the ground.
That's what makes a difference. You need to be able to secure the population, and to secure the population, you need a larger number of soldiers and police. That's precisely why the establishment has been changed in Afghanistan.