I'm very much going to take you up on that, because I'd have a tough time formulating a brief answer right now. Let me leave you with a concept.
Right now, the Canadian Forces Health Services is an extraordinarily effective construct. It has a 98% survival rate in modern warfare. That's higher than what the major trauma centres in Canada are achieving. It's higher than any army that has deployed into the field in war has achieved. It's phenomenally effective. It is, however, a house of cards. Don't think for a second that you can change one part of it without it rippling through the entire edifice. You have to keep all these aspects going; you have to especially keep training and research going.
We know what we could have done better last year because we've worked on it. If you keep the training going at the intensity it is at right now, and if you keep the research going at the intensity it is at right now, we'll figure out what to do better next year. That's a question we don't have the answer to right now.
We've kept studying what's been going on. Every one of our guys who was killed had an autopsy. We analysed whether his protective equipment did well or not—every single one. That's why the Highway of Heroes ends in Toronto. Did everybody know that? That's why it ends there, because the Chief Coroner for Ontario looks at every one of our dead, does that study, and sends a report back. We've studied the past.
Right now, keep the machine going so that we can try as much as possible to anticipate the future.