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The Nuclear Card

The Obama Team Just Doesn’t Get It: US Violence and Occupation Spark Terrorism

Posted on 04 May 2012 by Emperor

brennan

A bit of a long read, but well worth it (h/t: BA):

The Obama Team Just Doesn’t Get It: US Violence and Occupation Spark Terrorism

(Alternet.org)

John Brennan, President Obama’s chief adviser on counter-terrorism, has again put on public display two unfortunate facts: (1) that the White House has no clue as to how to counter terrorism; and (2) (in Brennan’s words) “the unfortunate fact that to save many innocent lives we are sometimes obliged to take lives.”

In a speech on April 30, Brennan did share one profound insight: “Countries typically don’t want foreign soldiers in their cities and towns.” His answer to that? “The precision of targeted [drone] strikes.” Does he really mean to suggest that local populations are more accepting of unmanned drones buzzing overhead and firing missiles on the push of a button by a “pilot” halfway around the world?

Beneath Brennan’s Orwellian rhetoric lies the reality that he remains unable (or unwilling) to deal with, the $64 question former White House correspondent Helen Thomas asked him repeatedly on Jan. 8, 2010, about why terrorists do the things they do:

Brennan: “Al Qaeda is just determined to carry out attacks here against the homeland.”

Thomas: “But you haven’t explained why.”

Is it possible he still has no clue? To demonstrate how little progress Brennan has made in the way of understanding the challenge of “terrorism,” let’s look back at my commentary in early 2010 about Brennan’s vacuous non-answers to Helen Thomas. At the time, I wrote:

Thank God for Helen Thomas, the only person to show any courage at the White House press briefing after President Barack Obama gave a flaccid account of the intelligence screw-up that almost downed an airliner on Christmas Day 2009.

After Obama briefly addressed L’Affaire Abdulmutallab and wrote “must do better” on the report cards of the national security schoolboys responsible for the near catastrophe, the President turned the stage over to counter-terrorism guru John Brennan and Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano.

It took 89-year old veteran correspondent Helen Thomas (now 91) to break through the vapid remarks about rechanneling “intelligence streams,” fixing “no-fly” lists, deploying “behavior detection officers,” and buying more body-imaging scanners.

Thomas recognized the John & Janet filibuster for what it was, as her catatonic press colleagues took their customary dictation and asked their predictable questions. Instead, Thomas posed an adult query that spotlighted the futility of government plans to counter terrorism with more high-tech gizmos and more intrusions on the liberties and privacy of the traveling public.

She asked why Abdulmutallab did what he did. Thomas: “And what is the motivation? We never hear what you find out on why.”

Brennan: “Al Qaeda is an organization that is dedicated to murder and wanton slaughter of innocents. … They attract individuals like Mr. Abdulmutallab and use them for these types of attacks. He was motivated by a sense of religious sort of drive. Unfortunately, al Qaeda has perverted Islam, and has corrupted the concept of Islam, so that he’s (sic) able to attract these individuals. But al Qaeda has the agenda of destruction and death.”

Thomas: “And you’re saying it’s because of religion?”

Brennan: “I’m saying it’s because of an al Qaeda organization that used the banner of religion in a very perverse and corrupt way.”

Thomas: “Why?”

Brennan: “I think this is a — long issue, but al Qaeda is just determined to carry out attacks here against the homeland.”

Thomas: “But you haven’t explained why.”

Neither did President Obama, nor anyone else in the U.S. political/media hierarchy. All the American public gets is the boilerplate about how al Qaeda evildoers are perverting a religion and exploiting impressionable young men. There is almost no discussion about why so many people in the Muslim world object to U.S. policies so strongly that they are inclined to resist violently and even resort to suicide attacks.

Obama’s Non-Answer

I had been hoping Obama would say something intelligent about what drove Abdulmutallab to do what he did, but the President uttered a few vacuous comments before sending in the clowns. This is what he said before he walked away from the podium:

“It is clear that al Qaeda increasingly seeks to recruit individuals without known terrorist affiliations … to do their bidding. … And that’s why we must communicate clearly to Muslims around the world that al Qaeda offers nothing except a bankrupt vision of misery and death … while the United States stands with those who seek justice and progress. … That’s the vision that is far more powerful than the hatred of these violent extremists.”

But why it is so hard for Muslims to “get” that message? Why can’t they end their preoccupation with dodging U.S. missiles in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen and Gaza long enough to reflect on how we are only trying to save them from terrorists while simultaneously demonstrating our commitment to “justice and progress”?

Does a smart fellow like Obama expect us to believe that all we need to do is “communicate clearly to Muslims” that it is al Qaeda, not the U.S. and its allies, that brings “misery and death”? Does any informed person not know that the unprovoked U.S.-led invasion of Iraq killed hundreds of thousands of Iraqis and displaced 4.5 million from their homes? How is that for “misery and death”?

Rather than a failure to communicate, U.S. officials are trying to rewrite recent history, which seems to be much easier to accomplish with the Washington press corps and large segments of the American population than with the Muslim world. But why isn’t there a frank discussion by America’s leaders and media about the real motivation of Muslim anger toward the United States? Why was Helen Thomas the only journalist to raise the touchy but central question of motive?

Peeking Behind the Screen

We witnessed a similar phenomenon when the 9/11 Commission Report tiptoed into a cautious discussion of possible motives behind the 9/11 attacks. To their credit, the drafters of that report apparently went as far as their masters would allow, in gingerly introducing a major elephant into the room: “America’s policy choices have consequences. Right or wrong, it is simply a fact that American policy regarding the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and American actions in Iraq are dominant staples of popular commentary across the Arab and Muslim world.” (p. 376)

When asked later about the flabby way that last sentence ended, former Rep. Lee Hamilton, Vice-Chair of the 9/11 Commission, explained that there had been a Donnybrook over whether that paragraph could be included at all.

The drafters also squeezed in the reason given by Khalid Sheikh Mohammed as to why he “masterminded” the attacks on 9/11: “By his own account, KSM’s animus toward the United States stemmed … from his violent disagreement with U.S. foreign policy favoring Israel.”

Would you believe that former Vice President Dick Cheney has also pointed to U.S. support for Israel as one of the “true sources of resentment”? This unique piece of honesty crept into his speech to the American Enterprise Institute on May 21, 2009.

Sure, he also trotted out the bromide that the terrorists hate “all the things that make us a force for good in the world.” But the Israel factor slipped into the speech, perhaps an inadvertent acknowledgement of the Israeli albatross adorning the neck of U.S. policy in the Middle East. Very few pundits and academicians are willing to allude to this reality, presumably out of fear for their future career prospects.

Former senior CIA officer Paul R. Pillar, now a professor at Georgetown University, is one of the few willing to refer, in his typically understated way, to “all the other things … including policies and practices that affect the likelihood that people … will be radicalized, and will try to act out the anger against us.” One has to fill in the blanks regarding what those “other things” are.

But no worries. Secretary Napolitano has a fix for this unmentionable conundrum. It’s called “counter-radicalization,” which she describes thusly: “How do we identify someone before they become radicalized to the point where they’re ready to blow themselves up with others on a plane? And how do we communicate better American values and so forth … around the globe?”

Better communication. That’s the ticket.

Hypocrisy and Double Talk

But Napolitano doesn’t acknowledge the underlying problem, which is that many Muslims have watched Washington’s behavior closely for many years and view U.S. declarations about peace, justice, democracy and human rights as infuriating examples of hypocrisy and double talk. So, Washington’s sanitized discussion about motives for terrorism seems more intended for the U.S. domestic audience than the Muslim world.

After all, people in the Middle East already know how Palestinians have been mistreated for decades; how Washington has propped up Arab dictatorships; how Muslims have been locked away at Guantanamo without charges; how the U.S. military has killed civilians in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere; how U.S. mercenaries have escaped punishment for slaughtering innocents.

The purpose of U.S. “public diplomacy” appears more designed to shield Americans from this unpleasant reality, offering instead feel-good palliatives about the beneficence of U.S. actions. Most American journalists and politicians go along with the charade out of fear that otherwise they would be accused of lacking patriotism or sympathizing with “the enemy.”

Commentators who are neither naïve nor afraid are simply shut out of the Fawning Corporate Media (FCM). Salon.com’s Glenn Greenwald, for example, has complained loudly about “how our blind, endless enabling of Israeli actions fuels terrorism directed at the U.S.,” and how it is taboo to point this out.

Greenwald recently called attention to a little-noticed Associated Press report on the possible motives of the 23-year-old Nigerian Abdulmutallab. The report quoted his Yemeni friends to the effect that the he was “not overtly extremist.” But they noted that he was open about his sympathies toward the Palestinians and his anger over Israel’s actions in Gaza. (Emphasis added)

Former CIA specialist on al Qaeda, Michael Scheuer, has been still more outspoken on what he sees as Israel’s tying down the American Gulliver in the Middle East. Speaking Monday on C-SPAN, he complained bitterly that any debate on the issue of American support for Israel and its effects is normally squelched. Scheuer added that the Israel Lobby had just succeeded in getting him removed from his job at the Jamestown Foundation think tank for saying that Obama was “doing what I call the Tel Aviv Two Step.”

More to the point, Scheuer asserted: “For anyone to say that our support for Israel doesn’t hurt us in the Muslim world … is to just defy reality.”

Beyond loss of work, those who speak out can expect ugly accusations. The Israeli media network Arutz Sheva, which is considered the voice of the settler movement, weighed in strongly, citing Scheuer’s C-SPAN remarks and branding them “blatantly anti-Semitic.”

Read the rest here…

  • Just Stopping By

    @Géji: Thanks for your comment. I did say that there were areas where I agreed with Zakaria Ali Sher, and I believe that the example you cite is one area where we would agree. I don’t think that I go as far as he does in some areas, but I also think that he made some good points.

    Perhaps the difference is that I don’t think that the example has anything to do with Westerners’ supposedly being taught that our lives are worth more than others’ lives. I think that almost every group tries to justify its actions. In the case of the United States, it has done so by claiming that it imposes sanctions or invades countries to help the people in those countries (whether they want our help or not). But, in a weird sense, that justification does rely on a belief that Americans do attach at least some value to others’ lives and would agree with the goal of helping others improve their lives. It also relies on Americans’ willingness to believe that the end result will justify the initial suffering.

  • Géji

    @Just Stopping By says: “If we blew up a power plant in Iraq, it was (portrayed as necessary) to weaken Saddam’s regime and help clear the path to the liberation of the Iraqi people; if Iraqis do so today, it is (portrayed as) some inexplicable internecine squabble in which they are irrationally hurting their own people.”

    My dear akhi, you’re just confirming the whole point of Zakaria Ali Sher statement. Even by your own comparison of example – “if we [Americans] blew up a power plant in Iraq to weaken” vs “if Iraqis do so [in Iraq]” – is in my opinion the whole point Mr Zakaria was trying to make. How can we determine thus the one committing the ultimate violation of justice in the first place, for example when Group-A blew-up things in the foreign nation of Group-B vs Group B doing the same in their own nation? Isn’t that the ultimate violation of Justice when group A believes in the first place it posses the same power as group B in the very own nation of the latter?

  • Just Stopping By

    @Senor says, “[Anders Brevik] engaged in guerilla warfare…”

    Encyclopedia Brittanica: “guerrilla warfare, also spelled guerilla warfare, type of warfare fought by irregulars in fast-moving, small-scale actions against orthodox military and police forces and, on occasion, against rival insurgent forces, either independently or in conjunction with a larger political-military strategy.” http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/248353/guerrilla-warfare

    I don’t consider Brevik’s targets to have been orthodox military, police, or rival insurgent forces. And I don’t think you do either. Perhaps you are thinking of a different definition of guerilla warfare, but this was the type of definition I was using, and I believe to also be pretty much the standard one.

  • Senor

    Just Stopping by wrote: The same cannot be said of terrorists like Anders Brevik (surely a terrorist and not someone engaged in guerilla warfare).

    I do not agree with that. He engaged in guerilla warfare and, like me, you find the act despicable. That is why we refer to him as a terrorist. Of course, there are people loons out there that think he is heroic and would call him a freedom fighter.

    @Brad Welch: I have never known any regular person on this site who has ever advocated for the use of terrorist tactics. If they did, Loonwatch would ban them in a second. Please do not sully the reputation of the people of this site. I have been reading their stuff for a long time and I know what you speak of has never ever been written by any person associated with Loonwatch.

    JT writes: No one is denying that terrorists seek to justify their attacks in the eyes of the people by appealing to religion, but miltiary occupation is the huge factor that makes them feel the need to blow stuff up in the first place.

    Military occupation and subsequent issues would be the reason people take up arms. They would not need religion to justify anything. Jews and Palestinians Muslims and Christians are fighting over land. If there was no land to be fought over, they would still get along just fine.

  • Abdul-Rahman

    @John

    What does a regional Pakistani political issue of telling an Ahmadi building not to look like a Mosque have to do with Western imperialists violence (and an Empire of bases) around the world?!

    Also if you bothered to have any contextual understanding of what you brought up (clearly your just throwing it out there because your an Islamophobe and found a random article) Pakistan has a certain amount of internal conflict. Such as say a certain amount of tit for tat violence between extremist Wahhabi groups and Pakistani Shi’ite groups (that some blame Iran for supporting, or arming to defend themselves from said extremist Wahhabi groups), and also tit for tat violence between already mentioned extremist Wahhabi groups and the Ahmadiyya (Qadiani) community in Pakistan.

    And also there are occasional conflicts with Baluchi separatists in the region of Baluchistan that is on both sides of the Pakistan-Iran border (Pakistan and Iran both accuse the West of backing side armed separatists in the region).

    But as for the issue at hand in this AlterNet article it is mentioning that anger towards the US comes from the US regime’s imperialist actions against the Muslim world (Iraq, Afghanistan, drone strikes in Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia, etc. and the US bias towards the Zionists against the Palestinians and we could go on). And since you falsely claim it is not the oppression but rather allegedly “religion” that causes this anger and hatred towards America in the Muslim world why don’t you listen to a comedian on this! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EM202BVLf78 “David Cross on the Terrorists”

  • JT

    “Nothing to do with any oppression.”

    Rubbish. If it has nothing to do with oppression of Muslims, and terrorism is mandated by Islam, then why aren’t there 1.5 billion Muslim terrorists? Why is it that most Muslims who finish reading the Qur’an don’t immediately get up and run to the nearest public area and detonate themselves? Answer: because it doesn’t say that in the Qur’an. Islam is completely against terrorism.

    There is a religious dimension to it, but it’s an incorrect interpretation so it cannot be blamed on Islam, and the behaviour of the terrorist themselves indicates that the religious aspect is nothing more than a recruitment tool. Terrorism and opposition to military occupations would exist regardless of Islam.

    A good example of why it’s occupation not Islam is Palestine. George Habash was an infamous terrrorist who hijacked 4 planes as part of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. And guess what? He was Christian. He still managed to justify the killing of civilians without Islam, what does that tell you about what causes terrorism? Or what about the Sikh terrorists who blew up an Air India plane in response to the attack on their Golden Temple. Or the Tamil Tigers who have conducted numerous suicide attacks to get their own country? No one there needed Islam to commit terrorism, just a political objective — so how can you say only Islam is responsible for terrorism and oppression is not a factor at all?

    No one is denying that terrorists seek to justify their attacks in the eyes of the people by appealing to religion, but miltiary occupation is the huge factor that makes them feel the need to blow stuff up in the first place. There is no direct route from reading the Qur’an to terrorism.

  • Sir David : Man on a phone with a french spell check

    Unfortunetly one persons freedom fighter is another persons terrorist.
    ALL Violence is wrong.
    None violence is the answer
    In peace there is hope :-)
    It does nô good pointing the finger elsewhere when your own finger or those you voted for or your rulers still have their fingers on the trigger.

  • Just Stopping By

    As another Westerner, let me agree with Believing Atheist, Hard Core Atheist, and JT that I have never been taught that Western lives are more sacrosanct than others.

    However, Zakaria Ali Sher does have a point, though I think it is a bit overstated. In the West, our military actions are usually presented in a way that they are providing ultimate benefits at the unfortunate cost of the loss of innocent lives (collateral damage), while actions by others are not presented the same way. If we blew up a power plant in Iraq, it was (portrayed as necessary) to weaken Saddam’s regime and help clear the path to the liberation of the Iraqi people; if Iraqis do so today, it is (portrayed as) some inexplicable internecine squabble in which they are irrationally hurting their own people.

    Still, there is often a difference in the validity of some actions, though I believe that it comes from the relative power of the parties and not their inherent morality. I do think that Western powers try to avoid killing civilians because they see little benefit from doing so: the resulting scrutiny turns public opinion against them at home, with their allies, and in the community where they are fighting. I don’t think that that means that Western forces necessarily make the right trade-off between the odds of achieving some military success with the risks of killing civilians, but I think that if they could press some magic button that would not affect the military outcome but eliminate the chance of killing civilians (and thus all the media coverage of the “collateral damage”), they would do so. This also leads to the interesting question of whether the West would have had the same sanctions on Saddam’s Iraq if the resulting civilian deaths had been more easily broadcast as directly tied to those sanctions: body parts after a drone strike are more easily visually associated with that strike than are the bodies of who slowly died of illness in a country that was viewed as poor in the first place.

    The same cannot be said of terrorists like Anders Brevik (surely a terrorist and not someone engaged in guerilla warfare) or various groups that deliberately target civilians. For them, showing that they can kill civilians if often viewed as a way of expressing power and of getting people to consider their message (Brevik’s stated goal). When a group bombs a mosque in Baghdad, it is not guerilla warfare; it is terrorism. But that doesn’t mean that we should jump to the conclusion that Westerns treat Iraqi lives better than Iraqis do before we consider the relative abilities and positions of each group.

  • John

    Which oppression has caused this persecution of Ahmadiyya?

    Worship place: It no longer resembles a mosque
    http://tribune.com.pk/story/374189/worship-place-it-no-longer-resembles-a-mosque/

    It’s your religion, admit it. Nothing to do with any oppression. Of course in west you would come up with all sort of excuses to cover up.

  • JT

    Brad Welch, do you have any proof for the very serious accusation you are making?

    And just add to what Believing Atheist said in response to Zakariya and Nur Alia, I too have never heard or been taught that Western lives are “sacrosanct” and that Muslim ones are expendable. Sure, the “we are better than them” attitude is definitely present in the media’s portrayal of wars in the Middle East but to say that injustice and inequality is actually taught to Westerners (this would include me) is absolutely incorrect.

    Otherwise, Zakariya is right that there are some people (in America especially) who don’t have a problem if a country is ruined for their own benefit, but this is something they pick up later on — Western culture or society as a whole doesn’t support the idea that some people don’t have a right to life.

  • http://thepenofawanderingstranger.com/personal/ Jack Cope

    Brad Welch, please back up your statement because I am certainly not ‘pro-terrorist’, I stated so here: http://thepenofawanderingstranger.com/personal/a-short-note-on-al-queda-et-all/

    I find it pretty typical that you can’t see beyond the them and us attitude. Just exactly where in that article are terrorists ‘supported’? As has been said above the issue of ‘terrorism’ is a complex and contrived. For example, The Founding Fathers of the US were considered and marked as terrorists by most Europeans, so has pretty much everyone who fought for whatever rights people enjoy today.

    So please, stop the BS rhetoric; if you disagree with something here then say you disagree and say *why* you disagree. Don’t expect anyone to be sympathetic when your best argument is ‘you support terrorists’.

  • Brad Welch

    I used to think loonwatch was anti-Islamophobia, but now I see it is pro-terrorist.

  • Brad Welch

    It sounds like Loonwatch people are sympathetic to terrorists.

  • Hard Core Atheist

    As a muslim, were you ever taught you were better than someone because of your religion? I was when I was growing up as a Christian, but I was NEVER taught that our LIVES were more important or that people needed “to be killed for the good of humanity”. Total rubbish.

  • Senor

    @Believing Atheist: You stated, ” I am a Westerner and have been my whole life and that’s not what I was taught.”

    I am also a Westerner like you. I am sure you remember the buildup to the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars. In the case of Afghanistan, they tried to say America was morally better because they treated their women better. In Iraq, it was by showing that Iraq was a backwards country with no democracy and that they had a “Hitler” in power who gassed his own people. The Bush administration sold it like we were going to those countries to help them become better.

  • Senor

    Terrorism is not that complicated of an issue as people make it out to be. First of all, I hate that word terrorism. That is a very slanted term. If the media was truly unbiased, they would call it guerilla warfare. Any act committed by people who engage in those tactics is usually because of some level of injustice they feel. If you agree with them, they are freedom fighters to you. If not, then they are terrorists.

    It does not surprise me anymore that we are not allowed to debate Israel on a mainstream level. I remember Michael Scheuer on Real Time. He is someone who tried to debate Israel and Maher kept asserting he was a great friend of Israel. Not too long after that interview, Scheuer lost his job. Helen Thomas was forced to retire for being critical of Israel. What a joke this country is talking about its freedom of speech and of the press. It is fully controlled.

    An example of this involves discussions on Iran and Palestine. How can Americans be informed if Palestinians and Iranians are somehow not allowed to give their side in the news? I can’t remember the last time I saw either people being interviewed by a MSM program. There seems to be a calculated effort to censor that side.

    I do not believe that the government officials in Homeland Security are so inept that they do not believe that, by supporting Israel, America puts itself in a dangerous position to be attacked over and over again by “terrorists.” I think they know, but they are not allowed to say it.

  • Christian-friend

    This is more of an opinion than fact. Turks live just fine, except for those living in Southeast Turkey thanks to the Kurdistan separatist, who are oppressed and attack like Al-Qaeda.

    Moroccans don’t have much freedom, but they have more than the other North African nations, so a plus.

    Stanis (Uzbekistanis, Tajikistanis, Turkmenistanis,etc), have boatloads of corruption, but people get along…..

    So…yeah

  • Abu Rashid

    @Believing Atheist,

    I don’t think Zakariya meant every single Westerner. I was raised as a Westerner, and I was never taught that explicitly, but can you deny it permeates the media, society and culture in the West? It is implied by the establishment at every turn, in their actions, their speech and their sentiments.

    So I think Zakariya has a point. Don’t get lost in your own personal experience, look at the general situation.

    Regards,
    A.R.

  • Believing Atheist

    @Nur,

    You don’t know me and that’s not what I was taught. Please don’t speak for me.

  • NurAlia

    @Zakariya Ali Sher

    I was going to say EXACTLY what you did. I totally agree with you…that ‘westerners’ have been taught that thier values, morals, ethics and lifestyle is the standard of excellence, and that anyone who ‘resists’ it is a savage and must be assimilated or killed for the good of humanity.

    I totally agree that ‘westerners’ see us as ‘less than human’…and even if we become ‘assimilated’ to be as close to White Christian Europeans, we will be what the Catholics called during thier Crusades ‘perpetual sevents’…because they belive we are in debt to them.

    @BA…

    Your whole life has been spent in a ‘western country’…and you relate to humanity within the context of the people who are around you. You see people who dont speak your language, or eat your kind of food, or pray like you as ‘foriegn’…no matter if you are fearful of them or not.

    So I agree that you MAY not have been taught to hate, but you HAVE been taught that people that are not like you are FORIEGN to your values, ethics, morals and society.

  • Believing Atheist

    “No matter how you try and spin it, that is the ugly truth that all westerners are taught.”

    I am a Westerner and have been my whole life and that’s not what I was taught.

  • Zakariya Ali Sher

    We don’t want to admit it, but the inherent core of western culture is that some lives are more valuable than other lives. Western lives – white, Christian, Euro-American lives – are automatically considered sacrosanct, while lives of innocent children, women and yes even men in other countries is considerable an acceptable loss. If you need to wipe out an entire family, an entire village, simply for the possibility of killing one terrorist (who may or may not actually be the person you want) then its collateral damage. People SHOULDN’T be outraged, they shouldn’t demand revenge or recompense for it, they should be grateful. No matter how you try and spin it, that is the ugly truth that all westerners are taught.

  • Solid Snake

    I personally believe that they do not want to recognize that. In fact I believe that this was their objective and result that they wanted. Why would they change it.

  • Sir David Illuminati membership number 16.69

    I am surprised that we are in agreement Susanna .
    Wilful blindness in not looking at the causes of terrorism Political correctness in equating being critical of a political entity such as the state of Isreal , a right of the citizens of Isreal with being anti semitic , the unreasoning crititism of a person of the Jewish faith.

  • Susanna

    The reason why these people can’t define the reason: Political correctness and willful blindness.

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