Thank you very much. Welcome this morning. Thank you for sharing your knowledge with us as we move on dealing with some really important issues, certainly for all of us and all of Canada.
Brigadier-General Kettle, in response to the issue of suicide, you mentioned that the men and women now are properly led. Between 35 and 40 men have committed suicide in Afghanistan; those are the current numbers we're aware of. That doesn't cover off people we know, former members who are unfortunately committing suicide as a result of their experience in the theatre in Afghanistan.
Can you tell me and the committee briefly, what happens when, as a result of the experience on a particular day when they've lost several of our men and so on, the group comes back to the particular camp? How are they helped to get over what they've just experienced and seen at that moment?