We all learn; we are all learning organizations. The intensity of the violence in Kandahar was unexpected.
Speaking of the RG-31, we will eventually have 75 of these vehicles in total. It is designed to replace some of the much more thinly metalled, not armoured, vehicles that we've been using for patrols and moving around some of our great friends from the civil service. It has saved a large number of lives. It was rushed into service without adequate training done in Canada, because people such as me made the decision that it was better to get it into theatre where it could resist the IEDs and blasts, and we'd catch up with training at a later date.
As for the actual number of lives it's saved, I could research that question, but of course it becomes, at a certain point, an educated guess. Nonetheless, it's literally in the multiple dozens, and I have not included the numbers of wounded we might otherwise have suffered—keeping in mind we have still suffered hundreds of soldiers wounded in that timeframe.
The light armoured remote weapon station, the LAV RWS, took a bit longer. In any land system the huge issue is the balance between firepower, mobility, and protection. In this case, of course, protection came to the fore and the LAV exceeded its weight budget, so a variety of engineering studies had to be done before it could be implemented.
The Leopard 2 tank has saved innumerable lives, and its main role now, as mentioned by the deputy minister and the ADM of materiel, is to take the hit. It goes down the road first, receives the blast, and, at the moment of truth, can assist our soldiers by firing on their objective with its main gun.
Of course, the armoured heavy support truck is probably the second most heavily protected vehicle in theatre, and arguably the most protected truck in the world in comparison with more lightly skinned logistics vehicles, in which we've had tragedies. We have yet to have a fatality in the armoured heavy truck, even though it's taken innumerable hits from IEDs and direct fire.
Does that summarize the issues, sir?