That's a very easy thing to answer.
Our soldiers interface with the Afghan population each and every day. It may be in the city of Kandahar, the villages, the soccer stadium, at the causeway that's being built, or at other bridges or wells. The focus of the provincial reconstruction team is in that whole of government approach, and the biggest part about the provincial reconstruction team is that word “reconstruction”.
They're there, seeing all those projects being put in place every day, whether it's delivering wheelchairs, helping rebuild the schools, repairing canals, helping to get the sewage system back so it actually functions, or helping to bring electricity from the Kajaki Dam. Those are all the things they see each and every day.
They see the immunization program for the kids. They see the number of girls going back to school. They see a Terry Fox run done under another name inside the city of Kandahar this last year; they had 10,000 people participate. It actually had young men in shorts and T-shirts, something that has not been seen before in that part of the country.
Those soldiers are indeed our best spokesmen as they go out, because they see it firsthand. As you said, they come home and they are quite willing to put their lives on the line and go back to represent our country for something that they see as laudable and important, and they do see the progress.
I say our best spokesmen are those troopers, corporals, and master corporals who actually deliver each and every day. When they're asked the question, their response is almost unanimous: they can see the difference they are making on the ground.