Of course, as you might imagine, Mr. Dion, there are levels of capability and levels of expertise. It's been our experience in many countries around the world that it is possible to take people from quite a rudimentary level, really take them from zero, and be able to, in a relatively short period of time, start to train them in some of the basics, the pointy end of the problem, which is the identification and location of IEDs and the safe disposal of those IEDs. There is equipment and there are techniques that are quite absorbable by indigenous forces, and we do this routinely with them around the world. They're very teachable.
When you get to higher levels of capability and you talk about trying to defeat the network of the people who finance these, place them, and fabricate them, we are typically then dealing with indigenous security agencies that are quite sophisticated.
My colleague mentioned the NDS, which I'm sure you're familiar with, in Afghanistan. This is a group that is staffed by professionals. They are very impressive, and they have all the capability in the world to be able to absorb the kinds of equipment and the kinds of techniques that we would normally provide so that they can be building up an integrated intelligence picture of the IED network.