It could be a long walk. But our soldiers see a lot, so it's just the ability to have a coordination centre so that we can turn and say to a fledgling judiciary that we are trying to create from scratch, “We're having some problems here; we need your help to come and deal with that situation.” So when I say “911”, I'll put it in quotation marks.
Certainly the Afghan National Police endeavour and the auxiliary police are an attempt to create a judiciary out of nothing. What you and I take for a professional police force here in Canada is certainly the ideal that we are trying to put together within Afghanistan. It's very slow progress. The RCMP officers and the PRT are working slowly and diligently with the local police, who we do have assigned to the region, to try to professionalize them, but this will take some time. The effort with the auxiliary police has been to try to screen out any of those folks who are undesirable and don't have some forms of self-discipline that we would expect from police. It's in very early days, and I think it will take some time to develop from there.