On the specifics of the specific location in Afghanistan, in the specific instance you talk about, I don't have the detail with me. I'm happy to bring that next time, so I commit to bringing that back to look at next time.
In general, then, from a capacity-building point of view and how we help Afghans create their own country, clearly there's a security pillar, and clearly the Afghan National Army and the Afghan National Police are important elements of that.
The Afghanistan Compact talks about the Afghan National Army trying to reach 70,000 personnel within the next couple of years, and I think that is an important milestone. What has changed in the last few months is our interaction with the ANA down at the very local level. During your visit, you will have been briefed on the observer-mentor liaison team, the fine work being done by the soldiers from the battalion in Quebec City. Working alongside them is paying huge dividends.
Certainly what we are trying to do is enable them to take over security for themselves, with us standing in the background helping them. For example, in the Zhari-Panjwaii area, we will not leave that region until the Afghan National Army and the Afghan National Police are able to handle that on their own, because we don't want it to fall back.
We are working jointly—I can't comment, really, on what's going on in Helmand province. I'd have to look at that more closely, at the interaction that is occurring. But the same thing is occurring, Brits and Afghans working together through that particular region.