With respect to information sharing, we have relationships with some of our Five Eyes partners, two of them in particular that have a permanent presence there. Some of the British in particular visit occasionally, as we do. That's a relationship to bolster, but there's a lot of room to expand on the relationships we've established with some of the other partners in the region, such as Japan and South Korea, and look to broaden those out.
What we lack in that area of the world that we benefit from elsewhere in Europe is a standing, formalized, regular, institutionalized set of arrangements that we can reliably go back to whenever we're working an arrangement. The absence of that type of formal structure increases the value of our simply spending more time in the region—deploying there more often, establishing those relationships, setting up mechanisms and then actually trying to use them in peacetime in a training environment, so we could call upon them if we really needed to later.