Sir, what I would say is this. I'm not going to talk about when I specifically did it. It's very clear to my chain of command.
We do this because we believe that's one of the things our young men and women in uniform have to be absolutely clear about, that we have the moral high ground. Our values are such that we do not stand by if we're witnessing somebody being seriously abused. We're not going to stand by. Not only do they have the authority to get engaged and stop it or help stop it, but we expect them to. That's exactly what we want to do, because there is a correlation, sir, to the kind of effect a mission like Afghanistan will have on people, and we don't want any ambiguity whatsoever.
We're not the inspector general, as I've said, of the Afghan forces. Police forces and army forces come from around Afghanistan, so we're not investigating their units all the time. If we witness something, we're going to get involved. I want the chain of command alerted. I want people to get involved and stop it, and then we'll refer it to the Afghan authorities to sort out the longer-term part to go with it. But I don't want any ambiguity on that whatsoever.