Yes, we've moved to training the trainer, and this is one of the things Canadians do so well. We move quite quickly within our task force—our 200 folks who are doing the training—to training the trainers. Actually, we have formal authority to move up what I call the value chain. It's great to train the recruits, but what you want to do is train the next level up, and then you want to get into the institutions, where you have much greater reach.
The United States training mission doesn't do this, and the British don't do it. Canada is doing this, so we are moving much more from plain training into mentoring and advisory roles.
Also, as I think one of the previous witnesses said, we need to embed in the ministries. We're embedding in the ministries. We are learning the lessons. We've gone to the Ukrainians and we know there is a lot on hybrid and cyber and other things that we can learn from them. It's this reciprocal space where, by learning from them, we can help them better understand what they're going through. We take back what we can, but we help them move to the next level, too. We are deliberately moving up the value chain in our training.