First of all, we haven't been used a lot in search and rescue because that's not what we've been tasked with doing. The aircraft is being provided to special operators and marines. I would say that in rescue delivery medevac, probably the closest thing we've done recently was a sailor who had a ruptured spleen in the middle of the Indian Ocean. You may be able to draw a parallel to someone in the Arctic on a cruise ship or whatever. There was literally no other way to get him to a hospital in the time that we did--with an aircraft that can hover up over a ship or land on a ship and fly over 500 miles to a hospital and land at the hospital and deliver the patient in that same amount of time.
We understand the concept of response time and time on station. Our value proposition focuses on time to rescue. Are there other ways the sailor could have gotten to the hospital eventually? Yes, probably. Would he still have been alive? Maybe. So there's an intangible element to our value proposition. What is the value of getting a guy to a hospital in a third of the time it takes us to do it now?