Going back to the training question, I'm going to give maybe too long an example, but before I went to Afghanistan, I did a high-level personal security training course that the British military offered, because I worked for a British NGO. Part of that was how to get through a non-state actor roadblock. I also did a Pearson Peacekeeping Centre course. Part of that course was how to get the roadblock removed. Both of those were essential skills that I used in Afghanistan.
I'm looking for where the focus is, if I can use that analogy, right now. The Pearson Peacekeeping Centre, when I did the course, had military people and civilian people in the same course working on that. The same thing was true in the British military course. We had both working together on those same things, but it was a different level of training that we were working at in those two cases.
If that analogy works at all, where is our focus of training now?