Thank you very much, Commodore Jung.
Once again, thank you for your service and leadership, and congratulations on the award from NATO, which recently came to many of you who were helping to lead the Role 3 Hospital in Kandahar. I think it very much reflects on the quality of leadership we had when you were surgeon general.
Could I ask you the very basic question about how we have cared for the toughest cases? I'm talking here about visible injuries, casualties coming back from Afghanistan, the Panjwai. People try to kill our soldiers. Take us through an example. A platoon is on a patrol and one or more soldiers trip an anti-personnel mine or a booby-trap. Someone's lost a leg. Someone's in danger of losing their life, far from their vehicles. What happens? Take us through the movements, briefly.
What has Canada done particularly well in Afghanistan in these sorts of situations to earn the admiration of others? What could we be doing better? What should we be looking at improving before we ever embark on a combat mission again?