With your permission, I will answer your question in English. Like my colleague, I speak French like a street hockey player.
The reference, of course, is to NATO's capability in gaps and helping to build up indigenous capability in counter-IEDs. NATO is highly attuned to the need to do this. NATO has a vision that this should proceed. There are gaps, significant gaps, in its ability to resource it, which NATO, I believe, is addressing. And of course with that, there are very significant gaps in the current state of indigenous capability in countering IEDs.
So this is where in fact we are hopeful that Allen Vanguard may, in the near future, be actually playing a strategic role to start that first important part of the process, which is to develop a strategy by providing advisory assistance in this regard to the Afghan government and to then be developing a comprehensive plan for how to build up this capability, to mentor the senior officers from the Afghan security institutions that would then become the nucleus for a national counter-IED capability. From there, it would roll out the program of equipping and training specialized units that would, in total, provide a collective and effective capability against IEDs.