No, sir, this is not the case. As I told you, there is always somebody behind them as backup. When the doctor is doing his university studies, he finishes his doctor's degree, and then he needs a phase of a couple of years to gain experience.
While he is gaining experience he always has a mentor. This mentor has already become a specialist, and he is trained by this specialist. This specialist is, for example, a doctor in a rank of full colonel or general who has the status of professor or doctor. He has done a second specialized training.
Those guys are making the big money, as we say, because they are also allowed to treat civilians, and they have to pay for this. We have a lot of specialists within the forces, so we always have a system to guarantee that we do not run out of doctors.
But to be honest, in some cases when we're going on missions we're looking for specialists--for example, those who do surgeries. We are now extending our missions. We now have four PRTs in Kunduz. Every PRT has to be equipped with a professional doctor who is a physician, who is able to act there. We are running short of them too, so that means we concentrate.... We shut down four hospitals with those specially trained doctors, and then everybody has to be driven, for example, even if it's in a northern or southern part of Germany, in the area of Cologne and the mid-west part of Germany.