Thank you, Chair. I'll be sharing my time with Mr. Payne.
Let me add my voice of welcome to you, Madam. It's good of you to share part of your day with us.
I'll make a couple of observations first. I like your phraseology when you say peacebuilding rather than peacekeeping, because it seems to me that war is raging in a number of areas where we have people going in. There's no peace. It's a conflict area. We're trying to build peace, but we're not keeping any peace because no peace exists before we land there.
I think warfare has changed some, and we see that with Afghanistan. As you say, people are there. You feel they may be on your side. I'm sure our troops felt the same way, but one of them got hit with an axe in the head during some talking about how to supply some needs for those folks. So it's a little bit dicey there. When there's no uniform you can't tell if people are the military or not.
How do you see the distribution of whatever you're going to distribute if you're not going to involve the military, if you're not going to have the assurance that someone's going to get what they need and someone isn't going to rip it out of their hands and take it because they're bigger and tougher and have two guns instead of one? How do you see that happening?