Mr. Chair, we're looking at every activity that we're doing through the lens of reconstitution and how can we achieve the strategic effect with perhaps a lower number of people as we reallocate resources to train more, to rebuild, to conduct the basic training, etc. This applies to all of our activities, including our international operations, as we right-size our various task forces, but it also applies to training exercises here at home, where we have deliberately prioritized individual over collective training. What I mean by that is individual courses, basic training courses, leadership courses, etc., that grow our number. In collective training, you get groups of individuals—units—working together. We haven't eliminated it completely, because we do need a certain aspect to maintain our expertise and our readiness.
To the Operation Nanook question, no, that operation is not going away. That is our most visible, round-the-year presence in the Arctic, and that's going to continue.
If you have further questions on that, General Scott, who hasn't had a chance to talk yet, is eager to say a few words.