I would agree with you very substantially, particularly in the early years. I believe that the country itself would prosper from mine development with time. As I say, we had a 10-year timeline to essentially indigenize a world-class mining operation in Afghanistan and put it into the hands of Afghans. My belief is that, yes, with the existing engineering and geological expertise in the country, there's a basis or a foundation upon which to build. But it would take an exchange program to create more expertise and to bring them to the current levels needed to run the most efficient mine and the most efficient exploration activity.
In terms of logistics, access is probably on the same order of magnitude as access to explore in Nunavut or the Territories. Although it's very mountainous, the weather is not as harsh. At the same time, there's not a real road infrastructure. Therefore, a lot of helicopter use would be demanded and a lot of fly-in, fly-out airstrips as well.
In terms of gaining, I think I tried to emphasize the need to build mutual trust. Once a mine is developing and the people of the country realize that benefits are accruing to the local population and are starting to spread across the country, I believe that the exploration geologist will become a welcome visitor in many parts of the country. The Afghan people, by their custom, when a person knocks on their doors, are bound to protect them from any sort of danger. Therefore, yes, in the early years it could be very challenging, and there would probably be a need for military escorts to accompany small contingents of exploration geologists as they're exploring for new gold, copper, and iron mines, and so on. But again, with time, maybe a decade or a decade and a half, we're looking at a change in the way things would be approached.
I would compare it, in my mind, and I'm not trying to be funny, to the turn of the 19th to the 20th century, with the activities in western Canada or the western United States, with all the exploration for copper and gold and the dealing with the indigenous peoples there. There were lots of forts and lots of cavalry protecting the people who were living at the frontier. It would be very much the same now as it was then.