examples, paul, going back to the civil war that talked about the terms of deals that we have made or choices that soldiers have made themselves. talk to us a little bit about that. well, over the course of american history we ve always tried to get our prisoners back. and we ve never set any kind of conditions upon those repatriations. so, even when you had cases in, say the korean war where a number of prisoners signed confessions they had used biological and chemical weapons against the enemy, we still did everything we could to get those prisoners back and managed to repatriate them to the united states. in vietnam you had a similar situation where you had one state, north vietnam, that argued captured american pilots should be considered air pirates, not prisoners of war. but that certainly din stop us from trying to get our personal back at any cost. in vietnam, many times we wound up paying 100 to one, to get our pilots back. jenna: interesting. 100 to one. so when you look at