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FOCUS | Neocons Revive Syria 'Regime Change' Plan Print
Friday, 12 September 2014 09:39

Parry writes: "Official Washington's ever-influential neoconservatives and their 'liberal interventionist' allies see President Barack Obama's decision to extend U.S. airstrikes against Islamic State terrorists into Syria as a new chance to achieve the long-treasured neocon goal of 'regime change' in Damascus."

Senators McCain and Graham held hearings on regime change in Syria. (photo: Getty Images)
Senators McCain and Graham held hearings on regime change in Syria. (photo: Getty Images)


Neocons Revive Syria 'Regime Change' Plan

By Robert Parry, Consortium News

12 September 14

 

fficial Washington’s ever-influential neoconservatives and their “liberal interventionist” allies see President Barack Obama’s decision to extend U.S. airstrikes against Islamic State terrorists into Syria as a new chance to achieve the long-treasured neocon goal of “regime change” in Damascus.

On the surface, Obama’s extraordinary plan to ignore Syrian sovereignty and attack across the border has been viewed as a unilateral U.S. action to strike at the terrorist Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), but it could easily evolve into a renewed effort to overthrow Bashar al-Assad’s government, ironically one of ISIS’s principal goals.

ISIS began as part of the Sunni resistance to George W. Bush’s invasion of Iraq which had elevated Iraq’s Shiite majority to power. Then known as “al-Qaeda in Iraq,” the terrorist group stoked a sectarian war by slaughtering Shiites and bombing their mosques.

Changing its name to ISIS, the group shifted to Syria where it joined with U.S.-backed rebels seeking to overthrow Assad’s regime which was dominated by Alawites, a branch of Shiite Islam. Then, this summer, ISIS returned to Iraq where it routed Iraqi government forces in a series of battles and conducted public executions, including beheading two U.S. journalists.

In his national address Wednesday, Obama said he will order U.S. air attacks across Syria’s border without any coordination with the Syrian government, a proposition that Damascus has denounced as a violation of its sovereignty. Thus, the argument will surely soon be heard in Washington that Assad’s government must be removed as a military prerequisite so the attacks on ISIS can proceed. Otherwise, there could be a threat to U.S. aircraft from Syria’s air defenses.

That would get the neocons back on their original track of forcing “regime change” in countries seen as hostile to Israel. The first target was Iraq with Syria and Iran to follow. The goal was to deprive Israel’s close-in enemies, Lebanon’s Hezbollah and Palestine’s Hamas, of crucial support. The neocon vision got knocked off track when Bush’s Iraq War derailed and the American people balked at the idea of extending the conflict to Syria and Iran.

But the neocons never gave up on their vision. They simply kept at it, clinging to key positions inside Official Washington and recruiting “liberal interventionists” to the “regime change” cause. The neocons remained focused on Syria and Iran with hopes of getting U.S. bombing campaigns going against both countries.

The neocons’ new hope has now arrived with the public outrage over ISIS’s atrocities. Yet, while pushing to get this new war going, the neocons have downplayed their “regime change” agenda, getting Obama to agree only to extend his anti-ISIS bombing campaign from Iraq into Syria. But “regime change” in Damascus has remained a top neocon priority.

In a New York Times op-ed on Aug. 29, neocon Senators John McCain and Lindsey Graham avoided the “r-c” phrase couching their words about Syria’s civil war in the vague language of resolving the conflict, but clearly meaning that Assad must go.

The hawkish pair wrote that thwarting ISIS “requires an end to the [civil] conflict in Syria, and a political transition there, because the regime of President Bashar al-Assad will never be a reliable partner against ISIS; in fact, it has abetted the rise of ISIS, just as it facilitated the terrorism of ISIS’ predecessor, Al Qaeda in Iraq.”

Though the McCain-Graham depiction of Assad’s relationship to ISIS and al-Qaeda is a distortion at best – in fact, Assad’s army has been the most effective force in pushing back against the Sunni terrorist groups that have come to dominate the Western-backed rebel movement – the op-ed’s underlying point is obvious: an initial step in the U.S. military operation against ISIS must be “regime change” in Damascus.

Neocon Sleight-of-Hand

The neocons are also back to their old sleight-of-hand conflating the terrorists fighting the Assad government with the Assad government. In the op-ed, McCain and Graham cite Secretary of Homeland Security Jeh Johnson supposedly calling “Syria ‘a matter of homeland security’” – when he actually said in the linked speech from last February:

“We are very focused on foreign fighters heading to Syria. Based on our work and the work of our international partners, we know individuals from the U.S., Canada and Europe are traveling to Syria to fight in the conflict. At the same time, extremists are actively trying to recruit Westerners, indoctrinate them, and see them return to their home countries with an extremist mission.”

In other words, “Syria” was not the problem cited by Johnson but rather the “foreign fighters heading to Syria” and the possibility that they might “return to their home countries with an extremist mission.” The distinction is important, but McCain and Graham want to blur the threat to confuse Americans into seeing “Syria” as the problem, not the extremists.

A similar approach was taken by Ambassador to the United Nations Samantha Power, one of the Obama administration’s top liberal war hawks. On Sept. 4, she sought to conflate recent allegations that Assad may not have surrendered all his chemical weapons with the possibility that any remaining weapons might fall into the hands of ISIS terrorists.

“Certainly if there are chemical weapons left in Syria, there will be a risk” that they could end up in the hands of ISIS, Power said. “And we can only imagine what a group like that would do if in possession of such a weapon.”

If any of these rhetorical tactics are ringing a bell, it’s because they are reminiscent of how the neocons frightened the American people into supporting the Iraq War in 2002-03. Back then, Bush administration officials blended unsubstantiated claims about Iraq’s WMDs with the prospect of them being shared with al-Qaeda.

In both cases – Iraq then and Syria now – the existence of those dangerous chemical weapons was in serious doubt and, even if they did exist, the two governments – of Saddam Hussein then and Bashar al-Assad now – were hostile to the Sunni fundamentalists in al-Qaeda and now its spinoff, ISIS.

Yet, this effort to confuse the American public – by manipulating their lack of knowledge about the power relationships in the Middle East – might work once more, by putting “black hats” on both Assad and ISIS and blurring the fact that they are bitter enemies.

In the weeks ahead, Assad also will surely be portrayed as obstructing the U.S. attacks on ISIS. He likely will be blamed for a lack of cooperation with the airstrikes even though it was the Obama administration that refused to coordinate with Assad’s government.

ISIL or ISIS?

Among anti-neocon “realists” inside the U.S. intelligence community, the concern about how these airstrikes into Syria might lead to dangerous mission creep is so great that I’m told that some senior analysts are even suspicious of President Obama’s repeated use of the acronym “ISIL” – for the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant – instead of the more common “ISIS,” referring only to Iraq and Syria.

The concern is that “the Levant” suggests a larger area including all “Mediterranean lands east of Italy,” that theoretically could include everything from Turkey to Palestine and Jordan to parts of Egypt. One source said inclusion of the phrase “ISIL,” instead of “ISIS,” in any “use of force” resolution could be significant by creating a possibility of a much wider war.

In his speech to the nation on Wednesday, Obama continued to use the acronym “ISIL” but his references to U.S. military operations were limited to Iraq and Syria.

The most controversial part of Obama’s speech was his open declaration to conduct cross-border attacks into Syria in clear violation of international law. He also vowed to increase military support for rebels fighting to overthrow the Assad government.

Obama declared that “we have ramped up our military assistance to the Syrian opposition” and he requested additional resources from Congress. He added: “We must strengthen the opposition as the best counterweight to extremists like ISIL, while pursuing the political solution necessary to solve Syria’s crisis once and for all,” a further suggestion that “regime change” is again in play.

Exactly what Obama thinks he can get from the Syrian opposition is a mystery, since he himself stated in an interview just last month that the notion that arming the supposedly “moderate” rebels would have made a difference in Syria has “always been a fantasy.”

He told the New York Times’ Thomas L. Friedman: “This idea that we could provide some light arms or even more sophisticated arms to what was essentially an opposition made up of former doctors, farmers, pharmacists and so forth, and that they were going to be able to battle not only a well-armed state but also a well-armed state backed by Russia, backed by Iran, a battle-hardened Hezbollah, that was never in the cards.”

Nevertheless, Obama has now trotted out that old “fantasy” in connection with his plan to extend the war against ISIS into Syria. Obama also knows that many of the previous Syrian “moderates” who received U.S. weapons later unveiled themselves to be Islamists who repudiated the U.S.-backed opposition and allied themselves with al-Qaeda’s affiliate in Syria, al-Nusra Front.

What’s Up?

Given that record – and Obama’s knowledge of it – what is one to make of the deceptive formulation that he presented to the American people on Wednesday night?

One explanation could be that Obama plans a more direct – albeit secretive – U.S. role in removing Assad and putting a new regime into power in Damascus. Or Obama might be simply pandering to the neocons and liberal hawks who would have gone berserk if he had acknowledged the obvious, that the smart play is to work quietly with Assad to defeat ISIS and al-Nusra Front.

The other smart play might be for Obama to resume his behind-the-scenes cooperation with Russian President Vladimir Putin who helped engineer Syria’s agreement to surrender its chemical weapons arsenal last year and who could presumably broker a quiet agreement between Obama and Assad to allow the U.S. airstrikes now.

Though the U.S. neocons and “liberal interventionists” exploited the Ukraine crisis to drive a wedge between the two leaders, Obama might want to reconsider that estrangement and accept the help of Russia – as well as Iran – in achieving a goal that they all agree on: defeating ISIS and other Sunni terrorist groups.

Yet, in Wednesday’s speech, Obama seemed to go out of his way to insult Putin by decrying “Russian aggression” in Ukraine where the U.S. government has accused Moscow of violating Ukraine’s sovereignty by crossing the border into eastern Ukraine and aiding ethnic Russian rebels.Obama claimed that Washington’s own intervention in Ukraine was “in support of the Ukrainian peoples’ right to determine their own destiny.”

Yet the realities in Kiev, whose government is backed by the U.S., and in Damascus, whose government is despised by Washington, have eerie parallels. In Syria, Assad, a longtime dictator, won a recent election that was truncated by civil strife. In Ukraine, the current government was established by a February coup d’etat that overthrew an elected president and is now headed by a president elected by only a portion of the population, excluding much of the rebellious east.

Yet, in one country – Ukraine – the United States says outside intervention even by a neighbor to protect a population under military assault is illegal “aggression,” while in the other country – Syria – it is entirely okay for the United States to send its military halfway around the world, cross Syria’s borders to carry out bombing raids while also arming militants to overthrow the internationally recognized government.

Typically, neither Obama nor the U.S. mainstream press made note of the hypocrisy. But the bigger question now is will the neocons hijack Obama’s bombing campaign against ISIS in Syria to achieve one of their most beloved goals, regime change in Damascus.

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Why I'm Glad the Money in Politics Amendment Failed Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=7118"><span class="small">Carl Gibson, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Friday, 12 September 2014 07:35

Gibson writes: "If money is free speech, then speech isn't free. And if corporations are people, then every corporate shareholder is violating a constitutional clause that states that no person may own another person as property."

Protests marked the Citizens United decision. (photo: Reuters)
Protests marked the Citizens United decision. (photo: Reuters)


Why I'm Glad the Money in Politics Amendment Failed

By Carl Gibson, Reasder Supported News

12 September 14

 

f money is free speech, then speech isn’t free. And if corporations are people, then every corporate shareholder is violating a constitutional clause that states that no person may own another person as property. Any proposal that doesn’t address these two fundamental issues is a failure from the start.

Senate Democrats are all about securing their jobs for the next six years. SJR-19, the “Democracy for All” amendment that just failed a vote on the U.S. Senate floor, was never meant to succeed. It was a blatant fundraising and vote-getting ploy in a last-ditch effort by career politicians to keep their jobs. If DC politicians cared half as much about American jobs as their own jobs, our country would be in great shape.

To be clear, it’s obvious that money has completely and totally corrupted our political process. I recently wrote about examples of obvious corruption in light of former Virginia governor Bob McDonnell’s guilty verdict. Scott Walker and Rahm Emanuel both reward top campaign donors with tax breaks. Eric Cantor took a job on Wall Street after defending Wall Street for his entire Congressional career. Politicians have to win the support of wealthy individuals and corporations to be competitive in elections, do their bidding to stay in office, and vote based on their future employability by those same corporations and wealthy individuals when they get voted out or retire. This is obvious to even the most uninformed voter. But SJR-19 is only a band-aid for the hemorrhaging head wound that is our democracy.

As I’ve also previously written for this site, SJR-19 is only limited to campaign financing, and doesn’t address the fundamental problems of corporate personhood or the concept of money as free speech. Even if SJR-19 had passed the Senate and House, been signed by the president, and ratified by two-thirds of all 50 U.S. states, it intentionally leaves gaping loopholes big enough for any corporate lawyer worth their salt to drive a freight train through. Since corporations are considered legal persons under the U.S. constitution, and money is still considered free speech, they can claim in court that limiting their ability to spend money in elections is a limit on their constitutional right to free speech as people. Corporations and the rich will be able to continue influencing government officials, and we’re be back to square one.

Senate Democrats don’t want to eliminate corporate constitutional rights or money as free speech. They just want to keep their jobs for another six years by pointing the finger at Republicans, saying they tried to do something to help people, but Republicans stopped them. Expect a deluge of fundraising emails from Senate Democrats in the coming days, asking for your $3 contribution to their re-election campaign. Expect institutional NGOs joined at the hip with Washington politicians, like Public Citizen, to claim the vote as a victory as an excuse to hit you up for money. And expect Democrats to continue using McCutcheon, the latest Supreme Court decision allowing even more money to infect our political process, to flood the political process with even more money.

Now, of course I don’t want the Senate to be under Republican control. This would mean the extreme right would control our entire legislative branch, and would pass endless bills aimed at increasing already record-high corporate profits at the expense of workers and the corpse of the environment. We would undoubtedly see deregulation of big banks, loosening the penalties for companies that pollute our rivers, lakes, and air, removing all responsibility for employers to provide a safe working environment, not to mention the privatization of Medicare and the plundering of Social Security by Wall Street. Obama would be relegated to little more than a veto pen, and might even sign some of those bills into law, given how easily he capitulates to banks and corporations. But in the case of SJR-19, Senate Democrats are simply feigning interest in populist causes in order to win as many votes as possible before November.

A constitutional amendment is necessary to end the corruption of our democracy. But we can’t depend on corporate-owned Washington politicians to be the answer to the problem of corporations buying politicians. Instead, we have to start at the grassroots and state level. One organization, Move to Amend (FULL DISCLOSURE: I have a personal relationship with a Move to Amend representative, but I’m not being paid by Move to Amend to write this article), has been doing that for the last 5 years, passing resolutions demanding a constitutional amendment in more than 600 communities and 8 state legislatures. Over 360,000 individuals have signed Move to Amend’s call for a constitutional amendment abolishing corporate personhood and money as speech. And U.S. congressman Rick Nolan has introduced Move to Amend’s “We the People” amendment doing just that in the House.

Now that the voter bait has been shot down, let’s continue working in our communities to address the real issue – corporations are artificial entities, not people. Money is property, not free speech.



Carl Gibson, 26, is co-founder of US Uncut, a nationwide creative direct-action movement that mobilized tens of thousands of activists against corporate tax avoidance and budget cuts in the months leading up to the Occupy Wall Street movement. Carl and other US Uncut activists are featured in the documentary "We're Not Broke," which premiered at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival. He currently lives in Madison, Wisconsin. You can contact him at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , and follow him on twitter at @uncutCG.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

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No, Americans Aren't Becoming Hawks Again Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=6853"><span class="small">Frank Rich, New York Magazine</span></a>   
Thursday, 11 September 2014 13:23

Excerpt: "What's changed as far as the broad public is concerned is simple: The horrific ISIS beheading videos we've seen this year show Americans being slaughtered, not the Syrians we saw in last year's equally horrific images."

Columnist Frank Rich. (photo: The New York Times)
Columnist Frank Rich. (photo: The New York Times)


No, Americans Aren't Becoming Hawks Again

By Frank Rich, New York Magazine

11 September 14

Every week, New York Magazine writer-at-large Frank Rich talks with contributor Eric Benson about the biggest stories in politics and culture. This week: Obama prepares to expand strikes against ISIS, what the new enemy means for the GOP's isolationist wing, and Andrew Cuomo limps to a win in the New York Democratic primary.

resident Obama will address the nation tonight on his plan to "degrade and destroy" ISIS, a plan that will likely include air strikes in Syria. A new Wall Street Journal-NBC poll published today shows that a large and increasing majority of the public supports such action, a complete turnaround from a year ago when only 21 percent of Americans supported Obama's aborted plan to bomb Syria. What's changed?

What’s changed as far as the broad public is concerned is simple: The horrific ISIS beheading videos we’ve seen this year show Americans being slaughtered, not the Syrians we saw in last year’s equally horrific images. And the instant viral clout of powerful video shows no signs of lessening. So much so that even as the president prepares to address the nation about war on the eve of 9/11, the ISIS horrors have already been knocked from the top of the nation’s television news playlist by a new video — TMZ’s of Ray Rice. Though no poll has been taken on the subject, it’s possible that a majority of the public would endorse an air strike on Rice and possibly NFL commissioner Roger Goodell, as well.

When you look deeper in the latest poll numbers, you find that while the public supports action against ISIS (and I am part of that public), only 34 percent want to send in ground troops. This is not a country that wants to go to war; it remains a country that wants to take out the bad guys from the air, preferably with drones. And if we are to believe the consensus of Beltway punditry, it’s a country that also wants its current president to start adopting the bellicose language of George W. Bush to signify his “leadership.” Or perhaps only up to a point. The WSJ-NBC poll shows Obama’s total positive rating at a low 42 percent. But Bush is at 37 percent, and Hillary Clinton, lately positioning herself as a Democratic hawk, is in a virtual tie with Obama, at 43 percent.

Whatever the president says tonight — and whatever the fighting words he uses to say it — the fact remains that he possesses no magic bullet to take out ISIS overnight. And his hawkish critics don’t have one, either. Typical was a diatribe on the Journal’s OpEd page yesterday by Ryan Crocker, the American ambassador to Iraq from 2007 to 2009. He fulminates that “this country, and the president personally, must step forward and show the world that we can and will move decisively, collectively and immediately.” Hell yes! But when it comes to the troubling specifics accompanying all those adverbs, the man had nothing to add but gaseous truisms. He wrote that “we should avoid any appearance of cooperation with Iran” in our anti-ISIS campaign — sure thing, but he doesn’t say how we avoid crossing those wires. Crocker also warned that we must “avoid giving the impression that military action in Syria is intended to support the regime of Bashar Assad” — again true, but again accompanied by no explanation as to how it might be achieved since Assad could well be the unintended beneficiary of American military action. Crocker further pointed out that “we will need to continue an intensive, high-level political effort to help the Iraqis form an inclusive government.” Of course, but at least the Obama administration helped enable Maliki’s departure. According to memos that turned up in Wikileaks, Crocker applauded “Maliki's leadership and restoration of central government authority” as being in America’s best interests when he was ambassador to Iraq.

No wonder that the Journal’s lead editorial today could come up with no more specific advice for Obama in tonight’s speech than that he “concede that Dick Cheney was right all along.” That may seem like a farcical notion to many of us, but in the echo chamber of the neocon right, where the Bush-Cheney foreign policy remains the holy grail, Cheney is still considered a political asset, not a liability. And a call for ground forces from this crowd may not be far behind. In yet another Journal rallying-the-troops jeremiad over the past week, Robert Kagan pointedly likened Fareed Zakaria (by name) and Thomas Friedman (by unattributed citation) — hardly isolationists — to those who failed to appreciate the threat of Germany and Japan in the 1930s. Make no mistake: The 34 percent of America that wants an all-in war is chomping at the bit.

Last year, the GOP's isolationist wing — Senator Rand Paul, especially — was instrumental in stopping American strikes in Syria and appeared to be the ascendent voice in the party. Now, GOP leaders, including Paul, are sounding more like Cheney, supporting the president's plan while bashing him for insufficient hawkishness. Foreign policy hasn't been a deciding electoral issue since 2008. Will it once again be crucial in 2014 and 2016? And what will that mean for Paul and his allies?

If you read Rand Paul’s latest take on ISIS, a Time piece titled “I Am Not an Isolationist,” it’s clear that his position really hasn’t changed, for all his stepped-up anti-Obama rhetoric (still relatively cool next to his peers). Paul is still setting himself apart on foreign policy from the Cheneyites who could be his 2016 opponents — the super hawks Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio (among others) — and from Hillary Clinton. He could wreak havoc to all their plans by being the sole occupier of the anti-hawk slot in 2016. It’s intriguing that the mischievous Bill Maher, who gave $1 million to an Obama PAC in 2012, said this week that he was toying with voting for Paul over Clinton. But will foreign policy be decisive as an electoral issue in either of the next two elections? I doubt it, unless flag-draped caskets are once again returning to Dover Air Force Base.

New York State Governor Andrew Cuomo had tried his best to ignore his opponent, Fordham Law professor Zephyr Teachout, but last night he was forced to acknowledge her: Teachout won over a third of the votes in yesterday's Democratic primary. Cuomo has been a relatively popular governor and a champion of liberal causes like same-sex marriage and gun control, why did he prove so susceptible to a protest challenge from the left? And does his weak showing in the primary spell the end of any President Andrew Cuomo talk?

Given the tiny turnout in the Democratic primary, Teachout’s moral victory can be taken as that but not much more. Cuomo remains a mostly popular governor and a likely landslide victor over his Republican opponent this fall. But he was susceptible to challenge not just because of his more conservative fiscal positions, anathema to many in the Democratic base, but to the main point Teachout highlighted: his shutting down of his own anti-corruption commission, which led to the subsequent move by Preet Bharara, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, to open a federal investigation into possible obstruction of justice. Cuomo is never going to seek the presidency as long as Hillary Clinton is in the mix, in any case. But if Bharara’s investigation finds anything seamy, let alone illegal, it will taint Cuomo as still another corrupt Albany politician and his national aspirations will take a likely insurmountable hit.

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FOCUS | Fire Roger Goodell Print
Thursday, 11 September 2014 11:20

RSN: "Keith Olbermann weighs in on NFL commissioner Roger Goodell's handling of the Ray Rice case."

Keith Olbermann called for the NFL to fire Roger Goodell. (photo: ESPN)
Keith Olbermann called for the NFL to fire Roger Goodell. (photo: ESPN)


Fire Roger Goodell

By Reader Supported News

11 September 14

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rd3XY924uuU

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Cheney Says Iraq Would Be Stable if He Were Still President Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=9160"><span class="small">Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker</span></a>   
Wednesday, 10 September 2014 13:38

'Harshly criticizing the current occupant of the White House, Dick Cheney told reporters on Wednesday, 'Iraq would be stable today if I were still President." Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker

Dick Cheney. (photo: Mark Wilson/Getty)
Dick Cheney. (photo: Mark Wilson/Getty)


Cheney Says Iraq Would Be Stable if He Were Still President

By Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker

10 September 14

 

The article below is satire. Andy Borowitz is an American comedian and New York Times-bestselling author who satirizes the news for his column, "The Borowitz Report."

arshly criticizing the current occupant of the White House, Dick Cheney told reporters on Wednesday, “Iraq would be stable today if I were still President.”

“ISIS is a problem that President Obama has made possible,” Cheney said during a press conference on Capitol Hill. “I never would have let that happen when I was Commander-in-Chief.”

He said that he would listen to President Obama’s speech on Wednesday night about destroying the Islamic State in Iraq and al-Sham, but admitted that he was not expecting much. “Quite frankly, whenever President Obama talks about Iraq he sounds delusional,” he said.

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