Yes. Thanks.
The time is short, so I'll rush right in here.
With respect to a comment that was made earlier about what has changed in terms of how we're approaching this, we're doubling the number of health professionals, or at least DND is trying to respond to the needs. The pre-deployment training is much better than it was. We had some discussion about that. Now we also have peer counsellors that greet and meet the soldiers on the way back. There's debriefing time and decompression time on the way back. It's a time to talk, as I think you mentioned earlier, and a time to unload, to talk to people before they're released or find themselves back here alone. I'm just wondering, first of all, if you think that's going to help.
Second, really quickly, the mission has changed since we took over, particularly if we're talking about Afghanistan. It was a very tough combat mission when we took over. Now there's less combat. There are cleanup operations and patrols. The biggest problem now, really, is IEDs.
Do you feel that now that the range or the exposure or the difficulty and the nature of the mission has changed, with less direct combat, that the high numbers are likely to drop off?