We've been in partnership by virtue of the likes of Afghanistan, for example. Regarding what I mentioned earlier about this need to support our service people's transition to civilian life, we've been working quite closely with allies on how that's done, trying to work out what people do and what their practices are.
That dialogue over the last few years has been tremendously helpful, I think, to both sides. Although templates don't necessarily cross the Atlantic, the thought processes and some of the thinking and first principles are very helpful in designing how we make these transitions better.
There are a couple of examples of things that are perhaps distinct. For example, you've had the policy of taking bereaved families to Kandahar, if they wished to go, following the loss of one of their own. We don't do that, and there are reasons why we don't.
That's one example of a good practice that everybody speaks very highly of here in Canada. Although we don't think that template would necessarily fit for the U.K., it has influenced our thinking in terms of the way we support the bereaved, outside of that. That's a good example of how we've taken something, thought about its principles, haven't actually done the same thing, but we've learned from it.