I rely on how the commander of the army balances his budget across the board.
We have seen a tremendous growth of reservists going on full-time duty over the past three to four years while our operational tempo has really increased. Many of our reservists have gone from part-time to full-time duty. In 2003-04 we had in the order of about 3,000 reservists who went on to full-time duty. Today, we're at 8,500 reservists on full-time duty, and this has put a lot of pressure on the reserves--we've heard that--but also on the army and on how it balances its budget across the board.
As well, we're seeing the operational tempo and how the army is mitigating it coming to some level of stability. So again, the commander of the army and his commanders are balancing their budget in terms of their operational pressures and how they actually do things in their regions and who actually does the work now that they're getting into a steady state.
So in this regard, I think we can probably give you a better answer in a written form. But this is really a reflection of the army balancing its budget, and also of the tempo coming to some kind of equilibrium in terms of how we support operations in Afghanistan as well as the training burden.