Thank you very much, Madam Chair.
Welcome to our witnesses. Thank you for coming back.
We all have a few more questions, and we're very pleased to see the kinds of improvements in the armed forces that have come as a result of upheaval that you've all had to face over the years. Significant change has happened, and you're now being referenced as a model for others, so congratulations for the turnaround.
The issue, though, is that I can see all of this working very well within the confines of offices and so on, but when you're in combat zones, I would think that it's a whole different world. As much as you may have all kinds of statements about what's acceptable and what isn't, when you're out in the combat zone areas, which is what most of your service members sign up for, I would suggest, how do you deal with that?
That has to be a much more challenging environment to stay on top of and to ensure that the kinds of things that go on are appropriate in those kinds of atmospheres. How do you deal with those areas?