Those soldiers of the Operational Mentor and Liaison Team, the group that has been there now, in essence have deployed outside the wire for almost four months. They've gone out. They've lived up in the mountains. They've lived out in those far reaches, working and fighting, and in some cases, some of the soldiers we lost were from that unit.
Theirs is perhaps one of the most difficult tasks, but as I said before, it's probably the most important task, because that mentoring they're doing, that hands-on training, side by side, building the confidence and trust in those Afghan soldiers, that will be our success in the end. Because building them up to where they can conduct operations on their own confidently will be NATO's and the international community's success, as they take responsibility for their own future.