Lockheed Martin can choose who they want and countries around the world can choose who they want in order to train their troops. As an example, in the United Kingdom, we train all the British troops and the NATO troops that go to Afghanistan. This is a contract we have. We are in a partnership with the MOD on this. For me it's kind of obvious that when your country buys, it puts you in a much better position, because this way you prove to the rest of the world that you do it for your country; you train the pilots here and you train the technicians, and then from there on you can win other contracts, which is what happened exactly on the C-130J. We were chosen by Canada under this famous SOIQ and then what is called OTSP—operational training systems provider—and after we got those major contracts, we won six other simulators around the world and one for the U.S. Special Forces.
There's a French expression that says,
“No man is a prophet in his own country.”
It's actually completely false concerning anything on the military side. If you don't win in your own country, you don't get anything outside.
We had a letter from the Swiss a few years ago, because we lost a contract here, saying “Don't bother bidding, because if your own country doesn't buy from you, we won't.”