Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Gentlemen, thank you for being here.
General, I can't honestly say that I had a great deal of exposure to the armed forces before I was married, but my father-in-law was in the armed forces for 34 years. He was Canada's youngest RSM in the Second World War. He was responsible for transport, land, air, and sea, and ended up moving supplies in and out of the Italian campaign for three years before he was seconded to Blenheim castle. I kind of had to be exposed to all of this after I got married and learned a little bit about the armed forces.
One thing that Mr. Dorn said is something that you were talking a little bit about before when you were speaking to Mr. Goldring about the situation in theatre. Mr. Dorn was talking about when they were doing air-to-air refuelling. I'm not sure this is an exact quote, but he said that this should be part of your planning.
Can you foresee all of these scenarios when you're in theatre? I listened to my father-in-law tell stories about the situation when the Americans came in when they were getting ready for Monte Cassino. The Canadians had one objective, and then things changed.
Can you foresee all of these scenarios when you're in theatre? Can you speak from your own experience of how things change on the ground?