CIDA has the lead on getting development aid to the people, as it should. That's the way it is. CIDA uses the Government of Afghanistan to the maximum extent possible. There's a fund called the Afghanistan Reconstruction Trust Fund, and that's how CIDA's money gets put into the system. Beyond that, I don't expect CIDA to know how to make a fire plan, so I won't tell them how to do development.
The military isn't in the development business, per se. The PRT development projects are CIDA projects. We provide extra security and technical assistance. I think the last five fatalities occurred while building a road. The reality is that in the current security situation in Kandahar the only way to build a road is with military engineers. When the fighting ends, there is no local general contractor who's going to go out there in his yellow Cat and start building a road. So the military has to do it. If it's a development project, it's been coordinated by CIDA in the first place. They may have bought the gravel. I don't know how all that stuff works at the tactical level. That's the short answer.