A tremendous amount of intelligence activity goes on, because this is very much intelligence-driven. What primarily is being done to curb that cross-border activity is the Tripartite Commission, which I referred to at the very outset of my presentation. The commission is chaired by the commander of the International Security Assistance Force, with the attendance or the participation of the Afghans, normally the chief of defence, and the Pakistanis, in order to cooperate along the border.
That Tripartite Commission is primarily designed for border security and to coordinate actions that will prevent the cross-border movement, which you just referred to, of people, of arms, or insurgents.
The Pakistanis have recognized that the Quetta area, for example, and those border regions, have insurgents who are infiltrating Afghanistan. They have committed to helping us prevent that.
Indeed, I have seen operations on the border where insurgent activity was detected, attempting to go into Afghanistan from Pakistan. Those insurgent movements were prevented by a combined ISAF, Afghan national security forces, and Pakistani intervention. So it is helping and working.
What they need is more surveillance and technology capability to control that border more effectively, especially at night.