I would say that there are two stages of the program Unifier. One was before the full-scale invasion, when 30,000 Ukrainian troops were trained. All of them, when the war started, were ready. They had been trained, and that helped. That was one of the important milestones in helping our resistance within the very first days of Russia's full-scale invasion.
Then, in terms of the joint training happening in many countries, Unifier is part of the bigger training program that is happening. The core base is the U.K. Interflex program, but there is also a lot of specific training, including of engineers and sappers and the training that covers the usage of new equipment. It is important because, in most of the training of newly conscripted soldiers, we have a totally different strategy from what Russia is doing. First, we train people; then, we equip them with everything they need, and then they go to the front line. That is important, because it helps.
I think what is also important is that, during this program, there is sharing of knowledge and sharing of experiences. Ukrainian soldiers share their knowledge from the real battlefield, from real military strategy, about what is happening and how it works during real war with their Canadian colleagues.
The feedback that I got from many of those who are part of the Unifier program is that this feedback is very important, because it helps to exchange knowledge, and it will definitely increase the readiness of the commanders of both of our countries.