I think you hit the nail on the head in trying to say this is a whole defence team approach. You talked about all the constituent parts. This has been an ongoing increasing level of activity, both from a training...and not just in the winter; it's in the summer as well, in austere, isolated regions across the country, in both the north and the northern portions of our provinces.
In terms of the interoperability piece, we've talked about having the Americans, and more importantly being able to operate within all the other government departments. We do have a great opportunity when we start to do more and more northern exercises. The planned level of training normally includes every ARCG, Arctic response company group. You'll also notice that elements of the immediate response unit from 2 PPCLI are involved. You can see that combined response capability, both the regular and the reserve component, being facilitated or enabled by our Canadian Rangers. So being able to operate, to travel, to be able to ensure, from an environmental and a social perspective within the region they're operating in, in very isolated conditions...allows that whole entity to go out and conduct operations in austere conditions.
The bottom line is that we are doing more and more northern exercises, normally one per division per annual training year. We then participate and rotate all the operational exercises, the sovereignty exercises in the north, which are Operation Nunalivut and Operation Nanook. That gets rotated by division. So we get the Arctic response company groups, and in some cases our territorial battalion groups will also participate in those exercises, primarily a reserve component.
So yes, we're doing more and more training every year. As we transition to a domestic focus on some of our reserve activities—LOO 1 and 2 I've talked about—I think you'll see a consistent presence. It allows us to take the basic winter warfare training we have and ensure that we do the next level of training and operations.