Colonel McLeod, I wonder if you could present that in writing to us afterwards as to how the follow-up works and how the tracking takes place. We have limited time here today, but I would like to know the details of that.
General Millar, you talked about getting it right in terms of the follow-up to suicides, but we have this persistent story about boards of inquiry, which are not technical assessments. They are standard military inquiries to determine lessons learned, what went wrong, and what might be done in the future, and yet we're told that there are now as many as 75 of these that haven't reported.
How can that be acceptable? I realize that it's a military procedure. I realize they take time. But if you're telling us that you're looking for every way to prevent these things, how is it that this particular basic military procedure for investigating an accidental or other death is not being completed in a timely fashion?