They weren't able to get through the customs system as quickly as we would want, to be able to have that go forward in the future.
More generally, we are not prepared in the United States yet for worse events than Sandy where the Department of Defense would be called on to provide support to civil authorities in order to respond to the disaster, save lives, and provide support to utilities for power restoration. We have agreements in place that provide a terrific basis for moving forward, but the concrete work to get to the level of detail where we have plans that we can actually fall in on and implement when lives are at stake, when every hour matters, is very much a work in progress.
There's a second dimension, too, that I'll mention, and that is in the Department of Defense. Until very recently, DOD was not where it needed to be to understand its own vulnerability, the vulnerability of U.S. armed forces to the long-term loss of electric power. That requires internal investment inside the Department of Defense.