I just want to emphasize that point, because we heard from Afghans themselves that while we are spending huge sums of money on the aid and development front, many people weren't aware of it. It wasn't visible to them. While they have generous feelings towards Canadians and believe that we're there helping and for all the right reasons, they didn't know when we were helping with education or health care, or those things, because a lot of the money is diverted through other delivery mechanisms. So there wasn't credit where credit was due.
We also heard from our soldiers, from our troops, that to have a more complete image and not be just the soldiers, the troops who are tackling the enemy, but to be the people who are providing an answer to the problems that the Afghan people face makes their job on both fronts easier. It makes the soldiers' job easier, and the development and aid workers' jobs, if those are seen as an entire package, and not the military and the development seen as separate forums.