http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/5279743/

CIA insider says U.S. fighting wrong war
Anonymous career officer makes bold claims in book about U.S. war on terror

A career CIA officer claims in a new book that America is losing the war 
on terror, in part because of the invasion of Iraq, which, he says, 
distracted the United States from the war against terrorism and further 
fueled al-Qaida's struggle against the United States. The author, who 
writes as "Anonymous," is a 22-year veteran of the CIA and still works 
for the intelligence agency, which allowed him to publish the book after 
reviewing it for classified information.

In an interview with NBC's Chief Foreign Affairs Correspondent Andrea 
Mitchell, he calls the U.S. war in Iraq a dream come true for Osama bin 
Laden, saying, "Bin Laden saw the invasion of Iraq as a Christmas gift 
he never thought he'd get." By invading a country that's regarded as the 
second holiest place in Islam, he asserts, the Bush administration 
inadvertently validated bin Laden's assertions that the United States 
intends a holy war against Muslims.

In his book, titled "Imperial Hubris," he calls the Iraq invasion "an 
avaricious, premeditated, unprovoked war against a foe who posed no 
immediate threat," arguing against the concept of pre-emptive war put 
forward by President Bush as justification for the Iraq war.

The book also argues that the U.S. focus on bin Laden as a terrorist is 
the wrong way to fight him and the wrong way to think of the foe. The 
real enemy, he asserts, is the radical form of Islam that bin Laden and 
his followers espouse. And he calls for escalating the level of violence 
in the war against al-Qaida.

Read the complete transcript of Andrea Mitchell's interview with 
Anonymous below:

Andrea Mitchell: "What is your background? How many years were you, are 
you in the agency?"

Anonymous: "Well, I've been in the intelligence community for 22 years. 
My background is I was trained as a historian, British imperial history. 
But I've been here since 1982 and have had a very good career."

Mitchell: "Starting in 1996, the CIA decided to create a station devoted 
to Osama bin Laden. Why?"

Anonymous: "I think it was created because the intelligence community 
had turned up bits and pieces of information in multiple areas of the 
world, after the end of the Afghan war, that indicated bin Laden was 
involved in one way or another with various Islamist groups who were 
opposing the Egyptian government or the Saudi government, the Yemeni 
government. And it was decided to try to make a concerted effort against 
this individual, to see where it would lead, to see if he was either a 
spendthrift billionaire, or if he was a serious military-minded opponent 
of the United States. And that was, I think, the genesis of the effort."

Mitchell: "Now, you were placed in charge of this station, the first 
time that the CIA developed a station just devoted to a man, to a 
person, not to a country."

Anonymous: "That's what I understand, yes."

Mitchell: "You say in your new book that the United States is not making 
a dent in the war on terror against these foes. Why do you think so?"

Anonymous: "Well, I think we have made a dent in some areas. I think in 
the leadership, the first generation of al-Qaida leadership, we've made 
a --- certainly made a dent. America's clandestine service has done a 
terrific job in that regard. But we are --- we remain in a state of denial 
about the size of the organization we face, the multiple allies it has, 
and more importantly probably than anything, the genius of bin Laden 
that's behind the movement and the power of religion that motivates the 
movement. I think we are, for various reasons, loath to talk about the 
role of religion in this war. And it's not to criticize one religion or 
another, but bin Laden is motivated and his followers and his associates 
are motivated by what they believe their religion requires them to do. 
And until we accept that fact and stop identifying them as gangsters or 
terrorists or criminals, we're very much behind the curve. Their power 
will wax our costs in treasure, and blood will also wax."

Mitchell: "But isn't it a distortion of Islam, what they espouse? How 
can you say that this is the Muslim belief to attack us and to wage war 
against us?"

Anonymous: "I'm certainly not an expert and neither am I a Muslim. I 
think the appeal that bin Laden has across the Muslim --- I indeed think 
he's probably the only heroic figure, the only leadership figure that 
exists in the Islamic world today, and he does so because he is 
defending Muslims, Islamic lands, Islamic resources.  From his 
perspective it's very much a war against someone who is oppressing or 
killing Muslims.

"And the genius that lies behind it, because he's not a man who rants 
against our freedoms, our liberties, our voting, our --- the fact that our 
women go to school. He's not the Ayatollah Khomeini; he really doesn't 
care about all those things. To think that he's trying to rob us of our 
liberties and freedom is, I think, a gross mistake. What he has done, 
his genius, is identify particular American foreign policies that are 
offensive to Muslims whether they support these martial actions or not --- 
our support for Israel, our presence on the Arabian Peninsula, our 
activities in Afghanistan and Iraq, our support for governments that 
Muslims believe oppress Muslims, be it India, China, Russia, Uzbekistan. 
Bin Laden has focused the Muslim world on specific, tangible, visual 
American policies.

"And there seems to be very little opposition to him within the Muslim 
world, and that's why I think that our assumption that he distorts Islam 
is just that, it's analysis by assertion. I'm not sure it's quite accurate."

Mitchell: "Well, you say in your book that the reality is that there is 
a large and growing among the world's 1.3 billion Muslims against 
America, not because of a misunderstanding of America but because they 
understand our policies very well."

Anonymous: "That's exactly right. I certainly believe that, and I think 
the substantial amount of polling that's been done by the Pew Trust and 
by other very reputable pollsters in the Islamic world indicate that 
most of the Islamic world believes they know exactly what we're up to, 
and that's to deny the Palestinians a country, to make sure that oil 
flows at prices that may seem outrageous to the American consumer, but 
are not market prices in the Islamist's eyes, supporting Russia against 
Chechnya. I think very coolly bin Laden has focused them on substance 
rather than rhetoric. And his rhetoric is only powerful because that is 
the case.  He's focused them on U.S. policies."

Mitchell: "You're saying that no amount of public diplomacy will reach 
the Muslim world and change their minds because they hate everything 
that we stand for."

Anonymous: "No, I don't think they hate everything that they --- that we 
stand for. In fact, the same polls that show the depths of their hatred 
of our policies show a very strong affection for the traditional 
American sense of fair play, the idea of rule by law, the ability of 
people to educate their children. I think the mistake is made on our 
part to assume that they hate all those things. What they hate is the 
policy and the repercussions of that policy, whether it's in Israel or 
on the Arabian Peninsula. It's not a hatred of us as a society, it's a 
hatred of our policies."

Mitchell: "You call for some very tough actions here. You talk about 
escalating our war against them, and you say in your book that killing 
in large numbers is not enough to defeat our Muslim foes. This killing 
must be a Sherman-like razing of infrastructure. You talk about civilian 
deaths. You talk about landmines. Is that really what we have come to in 
this war on terror?"

Anonymous: "I think we've come to the place where the military is about 
our only option. We have not really discussed the idea of why we're at 
war with what I think is an increasing number of Muslims. Which --- it's 
very hard in this country to debate policy regarding Israel or to debate 
actions or policies that might result in more expensive energy. I don't 
think it's something that we wanted to do, but I think it's where we've 
arrived. We've arrived at the point where the only option is military. 
And quite frankly, in Iraq and in Afghanistan we've applied that 
military force with a certain daintiness that has not served our 
interests well.

Mitchell: "But in fact in your book you argue that we are waging 
half-failed wars in both Iraq and Afghanistan that have only further 
incited Osama bin Laden and his sympathizers."

Anonymous: "Well, I think we made no impression on them with our 
military might. We are unquestionably the strongest military power on 
earth. And in both Iraq and Afghanistan, our opponents rode out that 
war. I wrote in the book that if we give the military, you know, 
substantial credit for actions, probably 40,000 Taliban fighters went 
home with their guns in Afghanistan; probably 400,000 Iraqis went home 
with their guns in Iraq, all to fight another day. We seem to have a 
little bit of trouble distinguishing between winning a war and winning a 
battle. And I think ---

Mitchell: "In other words, we're winning the battles but not the war."

Anonymous: "We're --- yes, ma'am. We've won, we won quite a few battles 
and marvelously so, but we're fighting opponents that perceive tactical 
losses rather than strategic losses. And it's quite clear that these 
wars are half-started."

Mitchell: "You call the invasion of Iraq, 'an avaricious, premeditated, 
unprovoked war against a foe who posed no immediate threat.' Why do you 
think so?"

Anonymous: "For several reasons. That was a passage cut from a larger 
passage where I describe my personal aversion to aggressive war, to the 
war started by the United States. And I tried to draw an analogy between 
our war against Mexico in the 19th century and just saying it is not 
part of the American character or our basic sense of decency to wage 
wars except in self-defense or preemption.

"The major problem with the Iraq war is that it distracted us from the 
war against terrorism. But more importantly, it allowed---it made us 
invade, or it caused us to invade a country that's the second holiest 
place in Islam. It's not really the same as the Russians invading 
Afghanistan in 1979. Afghanistan is an Islamic country, but it was far 
from the mainstream of world Islam.

"Iraq, however, for both Sunnis and Shias, is the second holiest place 
in the Islamic world. And to invade that country, on the face of it, is 
a great offense to Islam and an action which almost entirely validated 
bin Laden's assertions about what the United States intended vis-à-vis 
the Islamic world."

Mitchell: "But we were encouraged by many of Iraq's neighbors quietly 
saying, you know, go ahead and do it as long as you get Saddam, which we 
did."

Anonymous: "Yes, they certainly did. But you need to remember that, I 
think the neighbors of Saddam were afraid of Saddam. I'm not sure our 
goals were their goals in those countries."

Mitchell: "You believe that, you believe that al-Qaida is going to hit 
us again and harder, in this country?"

Anonymous: "I believe that's the case, yes."

Mitchell: "Why?"

Anonymous: "Well, they stay very much on message and on task. And 
although the line is not perfectly straight, bin Laden since 1996 has 
told us he will attack us periodically with incremental increases in the 
amount of destruction he causes. And he's been true to his word. Whether 
you start with Somalia and move on to the explosions in Saudi Arabia in 
1995 and 1996, you take one step further to 1998 and two embassies that 
were destroyed in East Africa. The attack on the Cole in 2000, and then 
the attack on New York City and Washington in---"

Mitchell: "Since there has not been an attack on the homeland since 9/11 ---"

Anonymous: "Yeah?"

Mitchell: "--- doesn't that suggest that al-Qaida has either lost some of 
its ability to mobilize and/or that our homeland security has been 
improved?"

Anonymous: "Well, that might indeed be the case. I tend to think that's 
more analysis by assertion. The one thing these people have, bin Laden 
and his ilk, is tremendous patience. One huge failing of the American 
counterterrorist community throughout its existence has been the 
assumption that if someone hasn't attacked us in a while, they can't 
attack us. And I think that's where we are, the kind of mindset that if 
it hasn't happened, it's because they can't. I tend to think bin Laden 
will attack us when he wants to. He's an individual who has been very 
unmoved by external events. If there's a man who marches to his own 
drummer in terms of timing, it's certainly bin Laden and al-Qaida."

Mitchell: "Have we not managed, by capturing Khalid Shaikh Mohammed and 
other of his henchmen, have we not managed to get at al-Qaida and 
undermine his ability to attack?"

Anonymous: "There is no doubt that the clandestine service of the United 
States has staged stunning attacks against al-Qaida. I would say that 
damage that the clandestine service has inflicted on al-Qaida would have 
wiped out any other terrorist group that we've ever known of in the last 
30 years, maybe longer.  The point I would make is al-Qaida is not a 
terrorist group. It's more akin to an insurgent organization. It pays 
tremendous attention to succession, to leadership succession. Were all 
of those people that were killed or captured important?  Absolutely. Did 
it hurt the organization? Of course it did. But there were successors 
waiting in the wings; there were understudies. The organization goes on.

"Just the other day in Saudi Arabia, the Saudis killed the man 
responsible for the, the kidnapping and murder of Mr. Johnson."

Mitchell: "Al-Moqrin?"

Anonymous: "Yes, Mr. Moqrin. And within hours of that, al-Qaida 
announced that Moqrin was indeed dead and named a successor. Part of the 
problem when we're judging success is looking at this group as if it is 
a gangster organization or a criminal organization or a traditional 
terrorist organization. It's none of those things. And just as the 
American army or any army in the West would have a backup to their 
leader in the field, so does al-Qaida. And it's an organization that 
replicates itself with tremendous dexterity and speed."

Mitchell: "Do you think bin Laden is still able to call the shots?"

Anonymous: "My own inclination, for what it's worth, is yes. He's in a 
country where he is, as Kipling would say, the little friend of all the 
world. He has no enemies in Afghanistan or most of Pakistan. He's been 
there for 20 years. For better or worse, he stood by the Afghans from 
the invasion in 1979 until today. I think he probably has an ability to 
elude us for the, for the foreseeable future."

Mitchell: "And why do you think the CIA has not been able to capture 
him, to find him?"

Anonymous: "As I wrote in the book, the intelligence community as a 
whole has been at war against bin Laden and al-Qaida with various 
degrees of commitment. I would go beyond that and say the Defense 
Department and the intelligence community, from my, from my personal 
experience as I've watched as a member of the intelligence community, 
the Directorate of Operations at the CIA has been, has turned in a 
performance that's nothing less than stellar. But it cannot do it all 
itself."

Mitchell: "Where is the falling down? Where is our effort falling down?"

Anonymous: "Part of it, I think, is again, as I wrote in the book, is 
the unwillingness of senior bureaucrats in the intelligence community to 
take the full truth, an unvarnished truth to the president, whether it's 
Mr. Bush or Mr. Clinton.  I'm not sure that it's proper to blame 
al-Qaida's existence, continued existence or attacks on any elected 
official.  I think the, the bureaucracy at the senior levels in the 
intelligence community is selective in what they take to the president. 
I think they are loath to describe the dire problem posed by bin Laden 
for a number of reasons. One of them is basically political correctness. 
It's not career-enhancing to try to engage in a, in a debate about 
religion and the role it plays in international affairs. And so we, we, 
we address bin Laden from the perspective of law enforcement, picking 
them off one at a time, arresting them, killing them. And I think that's 
a, the, the, the result of no one frankly discussing the size of the 
problem or the motivation behind the problem."

Mitchell: "And what do you think the size of the problem is, first?"

Anonymous: "I think the size of the problem is --- I think the first step 
in understanding the problem is to try to divorce yourself from the 
emotions generated by bin Laden's activities and rhetoric and the 
activities and rhetoric of the people who agree with him, or support 
him. The decapitation of people, the flying into the World Trade Center, 
the destruction of the, of the Destroyer Cole raise emotions that they 
must raise among Americans. But they --- when we respond to those in a law 
enforcement manner, in a manner that describes these men as, again, 
criminals or terrorists, we, we fail to understand the size of the 
organization that supports al-Qaida and the size of the organization 
that al-Qaida has bred for over 20 years. I think we also forget that 
it's a 20-year-old organization. It's an organization that has Muslims 
from every ethnic group in the world. It's extraordinary. It's a 
singular accomplishment on bin Laden's part to have created an 
organization where all those Muslims from different ethnic groups, 
different linguistic groups work together in a manner that's effective 
enough to take on the United States in a war. We watched the 
Palestinians for 50 years unable to agree amongst themselves --- and 
they're all Palestinians.

"So that's one problem. The other is an analytic problem. If you're 
looking at a terrorist group, you don't put together an order of battle 
as you would for an army or an insurgency. And so you talk about taking 
down three-quarters of al-Qaida's leadership. Well, at the end of the 
day, what we, what we've done is take down three-quarters of the 
al-Qaida leadership we knew of on 11 September 2001. And if you take 
that as a measurable success, it is. But you don't know, first, how big 
the organization was you started to work against; and second, the 
assumption is that it's a static, sterile organization that doesn't 
grow. And the one thing we can be certain of is that the attack on 
Afghanistan by the United States and the continued occupation of 
Afghanistan has caused the number of volunteers going to al-Qaida in 
Afghanistan, and the amount of money going to al-Qaida in Afghanistan, 
to have increased, I would say, probably dramatically.

Mitchell: "What is George Tenet not telling George Bush?"

Anonymous: "I'm not in a position to tell you that. I'm in a position 
where I could tell you what I would like to tell the president."

Mitchell: "What would you like to tell the president?"

Anonymous: "I would like to tell the president, I think, and, and it's 
presumptuous of me, but I genuinely think that we have underestimated 
the scope of the enemy, the dedication of the enemy and the threat that 
it poses to the United States. I think someone should have gone to the 
president when the, when the discussion of going to Iraq was broached 
and have said, Mr. President, this is something that can only help Osama 
bin Laden. Whatever the danger posed by Saddam, whatever weapons he had, 
is almost irrelevant in that the boost it would give to al-Qaida was 
easily seen. And if that message wasn't delivered, then I think there 
was a mistake made. I also think that Mr. Lincoln's view that one war at 
a time is plenty is probably a good piece of guidance."

Mitchell: "Now, you told the 9/11 commission that there were people in 
the agency who basically ignored the advice of your unit, the Osama bin 
Laden station, because they thought you were a little over the top, a 
little too zealous."

Anonymous: "Yes. I think we, we were certainly convinced by late in 1996 
that we had an organization that was militarily competent, that was 
structured in a way that made it very difficult to isolate and attack, 
in the sense that it was structured in 40 or 50 countries around the world..."

Mitchell: "Do you think, do you think that your advice was ignored? Did 
they, did the people within the CIA, the people in charge think that you 
were all exaggerating the threat of Osama bin Laden before 9/11?"

Anonymous: "I'm not sure if the people thought we were exaggerating so 
much as they just didn't take it very seriously at all. They thought 
that bin Laden was just one more terrorist on a list of terrorists. I 
really believe Mr. Tenet was the one person who did take it seriously 
almost from the start, but the rest of the senior leadership in much of 
the intelligence community, I think, did not take it seriously.

"But I think the most important failure was in the, in the years between 
1996 and 2001, the failure to correct obvious dysfunctions within the 
intelligence community was what led in large part to no one being able 
to claim that the intelligence community did the best it could before 
9/11. They were failures of cooperation, failures of leadership that 
were brought to the attention of the senior-most members of the 
intelligence community and to the attention of some people at the NSC. 
And whether or not they ever got to the people who could actually change 
things, to the, to the committees in the Congress or to the president, 
to our elected leaders, I'm not sure.

"I know for, for many years we told various members of the Congress and 
the executive branch that there was seamless cooperation between the FBI 
and the CIA. And from my seat and from --- and admittedly, from a very 
small portion of the total relationship between those two organizations--- 
I cannot imagine that in any way that could have been true."

Mitchell: "The CIA and the FBI weren't cooperating even though they were 
supposedly assigned together in the counterterrorism which you worked."

Anonymous: "From my --- over my career in the intelligence community, the 
CIA is an organization that produces intelligence for the rest of the 
government. The idea that somehow we, somehow the CIA produced 
information and didn't share it is a, a, a shibboleth that, that 
receives wide repetition.  In my experience, the flow of information out 
of CIA to the community is extraordinary.

"The people, as I understand it, the people who were placed in the 
terrorism components of the intelligence community from FBI or other 
U.S. government agencies were put there to ensure that the CIA did not 
become involved with domestic U.S. criminal prosecutions, looking at 
U.S. citizens--- anything that was beyond our purview, our legal statutory 
responsibilities. And so they brought in officers from other agencies 
who, again, in my knowledge, read everything that a CIA officer would 
read. And their responsibility was to cull through that information and 
return it, as appropriate, to their own headquarters for use 
domestically, something that was, again, meant to ensure the rights, the 
privileges of American citizens. And rightly so.

"My biggest experience was that was not done. And I think if there is a 
failure in these various investigations of 9/11, it's, it lies in the 
fact that many members seconded to the counterterrorist arena did not 
perform the intermediary job they were assigned to perform."

Mitchell: "According to Steve Coll of the Washington Post and his book, 
the White House complained over the course of several years to George 
Tenet that you were too myopic in your approach to bin Laden. Do you 
want to respond to that?"

Anonymous: "Let me say that within the intelligence community there was 
a group of officers, mostly women, very young, who worked extraordinary 
hours, who gave up vacations, delayed operations, and ruined marriages 
because, by the fall of 1996, they had recognized the threat posed to 
the United States by bin Laden and al-Qaida and the rising tide of, of 
the resentment in the Islamic world directed against U.S. policies; and 
that those two factors--- the lethality of bin Laden's organization and 
the increasing ire of Muslims against America who were coming together 
in a way that threatened the United States.

"I can't take any personal credit for identifying that. My role, to the 
extent I had one, was to bring forth the findings of those extraordinary 
officers and their extraordinary colleagues in the field."

Mitchell: "But what about the criticism that you were too myopic?

Anonymous: "'Myopic' is generally a term for 'fanatic' that's used by 
senior bureaucrats when you're delivering a message that they don't want 
to take to the White House. I genuinely don't believe that an elected 
official, whether it's the President of the United States or a 
congressman or a senator, would not want to hear the truth. My suspicion 
is that accusations of fanaticism or myopic focus came from senior 
bureaucrats at the White House rather than anyone else.

"But the book explains. And it's one guy's opinion. You need to take it 
for what it's worth. My own experience in the intelligence community for 
the past now almost 10 years on this particular issue is that the hard, 
hard truth has not been delivered to the elected officials. Certainly 
the truth that --- as it is seen by the people who work the issue on a 
day-to-day basis has not been delivered --- again, with the possible 
exception of, of Mr. Tenet, who, to his credit, recognized this early 
on, perhaps did not as much as he could to drive the community to 
address the issue."

Mitchell: "And what are you going to say to those who say that this is 
anti-American and that this is a really prejudiced approach? What do you 
say to those who say that your call for a war against Muslim people, is 
really only going to make the situation worse?"

Anonymous: "I wonder how much worse the situation can be, in the first 
instance. We continue to believe that somehow public diplomacy or words 
will affect the anger and hatred of Muslims. And I'm not advocating war 
as my choice. What I'm advocating is, in order to protect the United 
States, it is our only option. As long as we pursue the current policies 
we have, until we have a debate about those policies, there's not a lot 
we can do. We won't talk them out of their anger, we won't convince them 
we're an honest broker between the Israel and the Palestinians. We won't 
convince that we're not supporting tyrannies in the Arab world from the 
Atlantic to the Indian Ocean.

"It's the only option. It's not a good option; it's the only option. And 
I'm not saying we attack people who aren't attacking us. But in areas 
where we realize our enemies are, perhaps we have to be more aggressive."

Mitchell: "Even if it means civilian casualties?"

Anonymous: "That's the way war is. I've never really understood the idea 
that any American government, any American elected official is 
responsible for protecting civilians who are not Americans. My 
experience working against bin Laden was there was multiple occasions 
when we did not take advantage of an opportunity to solve the problem 
because we were afraid of killing a civilian, we were afraid of hitting 
a mosque with shrapnel, we were afraid of disrupting sales of arms 
overseas. Very seldom in my career have I ever heard anyone ask what 
happens if we don't do this.

My own opinion is we should err on the side of protecting Americans 
first. And if we make a mistake in that kind of action, I think the 
American people will accept that. It's --- this is a matter of survival. 
This is not a nuisance anymore. No one wants to be bloodthirsty, but 
we're at a position in this war where we've cornered ourselves in many 
ways, to the point where only the military option is available to us. 
And if we don't use that, and we continue to pursue the policies we are 
pursuing, then it's a very dicey situation for America...that the war in 
Iraq was bin Laden's dream come true."

Mitchell: "You've said that you think the war in Iraq motivated bin 
Laden. What do you think the impact of the war in Iraq was on bin Laden?"

Anonymous: "Bin Laden, I think, and al-Qaida and other of America's 
enemies in the Islamic world certainly saw the invasion of Iraq as a, if 
you would, a Christmas gift they always wanted and never expected to 
get. It validated what they all said about American aggressiveness 
against Islam. It made us the occupiers of the second holiest place for 
Muslims in the world. In fact, now we are occupying, in the eyes of our 
opponents, we're occupying the two holiest places, Saudi Arabia, the 
Arabian Peninsula and Iraq, and the Israelis are occupying the third, in 
Jerusalem. The reaction of the clerical community to our invasion of the 
Islamic clerical community to our invasion of Iraq was uniformly negative."

Mitchell: "So what, what is the war in Iraq to bin Laden?

Anonymous: "It is, I think, a proof of his thesis that America is 
malignantly inclined toward Muslims, that it is willing to attack a 
Muslim country that dares to defy it, that it is willing to do most 
anything to defend Israel.  It's certainly viewed as an action which is 
meant to assist the Israeli state. It is in every way predictably, if 
you will, a godsend for those Muslims who believe as bin Laden does."

Mitchell: "It's a dream come true."

Anonymous: "If you're familiar with that wonderful Christmas movie, 'The 
Christmas Story,' at the end of the day, Ralphie getting his air rifle 
even though his mother was worried his eye would get shot out. It's a 
terrific gift."

Mitchell: "OK. Thank you very much."

Anonymous: "You're welcome."
© 2006 MSNBC Interactive

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