Again, that's a great question for the current commander. However, I'm not completely ignorant of the situation. As General Howard pointed out, we conducted voter registration just as I was leaving theatre. So it was completed just as I was leaving.
Voter registration--the mechanism, the plan, the layout, all the rest of that--is very similar to actually conducting an election. Voter registration lasted for 30 days, a month, without any major security happenings. I'm sorry I don't have the number, but it's somewhere in the vicinity of 300,000 people who were registered in a population of a million, only half of whom would be of legal age. I don't know what the final number is. You could probably get it fairly easily.
My point is that when the election occurs, if we could secure these voter registration sites for 30 days, we can certainly secure an election for a single day. The insurgents--I'm not laying the gauntlet down here--are not the sort of organization that has targeted significant dates. I don't know why that is, but they haven't gone after Independence Day or they haven't launched major attacks that coincide with particular anniversaries.
I think, from the 10,000-kilometre view right now, the election can be held in full security with the forces that are available on the ground, remembering again that of course people will surge into the field on actual election day. There's definitely a view from the capital because there is lots of planning vis-à-vis that.