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pogingwapo

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  1. boh146_logo_tn.jpg

    Quote[/b] ]We just released BOH Ver1.46 for OFP.

    ======================================

    New Features for BOH ver1.46 :

    ======================================

    - A new Island: “Burenâ€.

    - Some more detailed soldier models.

    - Improved Helicopter models (V107,Ch47,OH1,AH1,AH64).

    - Improved Tank models (Type74,Type73 Heavy Duty Truck).

    - New tank crew (Winter camo).

    - Improved Japanese Radio Command Sound effect.

    - Many Bug Fixes.

    - New Japanese Objects.

    ======================================

    BOH ver1.46 Unit List :

    (Newly added or renewed units has * at the head of its name)

    ======================================

    ===Personnel Units===

    –Ground Self Defence Force–

    Old BDU Infantries

    New BDU Infantries

    Olive Drab BDU Infantries

    Winter Camouflage Infantries

    Iraqi Reconstruction Support Group (IRSG) Infantrymen

    *Vehicle Crews (Contains variations)

    BDU Officers

    Dress Uniform Officers

    Airborne Ranger Infantrymen

    New BDU Ranger Infantrymen

    Old BDU Ranger Infantrymen

    Western Army Infantry Regiment (WAiR) Infantrymen

    CQB Infantrymen

    Helicopter Pilots (Contains variations)

    –Air Self Defence Force–

    Pilots (Contains variations)

    Mechanics

    Base Guard Soldiers

    Dress Uniform Officers

    ===Individual Fire Arms===

    Type62 7.62mm Light Machine Gun

    Type64 7.62mm Assault Rifle

    Type89 5.56mm Assault Rifle

    FN MINIMI 5.56mm S.A.W

    9mm Machine Pistol

    9mm Pistol (SIG P220)

    84mm Recoilless Rifle

    110mm Individual Anti Tank Rocket

    FIM92A Stinger (JSDF)

    Type91 Man-portable Surface-to-air Missile

    Type01 Light Missile - Anti Tank (LMAT)

    ===Fixed Fire Arms===

    Type64 Anti Tank Guided Missile

    Type79 Anti Boat/Anti Tank Guided Missile

    *Type87 Anti Tank Guided Missile

    L16 81mm Mortar

    12.7mm Browning M2 (Three variations)

    ===Ground Vehicles===

    XLR Reconnaissance Motorbike

    Type73 Light Truck (Contains variations)

    Type73 Medium Duty Truck (Contains variations)

    Type73 Heavy Duty Truck (Contains variations)*

    High Mobility Vehicle (HMV) (Contains variations)

    Passenger Step Car (For B767s)

    Type73 Armored Personnel Carrier (Contains variations)

    Type96 Wheeled Armored Personal Carrier (Prototype/Mass-produced)

    Light Armored Vehicle (LAV) (Contains variations)

    Type82 Command and Communication Vehicle

    Type87 Reconnaissance Vehicle

    *Type74 Main Battle Tank (Contains variations)

    Type90 Main Battle Tank (Contains variations)

    Type89 Infantry Fighting Vehicle (Contains variations)

    Type87 Self Propelled Anti Air Gun

    ===Helicopters===

    *AH-1S Attack Helicopter (Contains variations)

    *AH-64D(J) Attack Helicopter (Contains 2 camouflage patterns)

    *AH64D Attack Helicopter (U.S.Army)

    OH-6 Light Observation Helicopter (Contains variations)

    *OH-1 Light Observation Helicopter

    UH-1 Transport Helicopter, and variation

    UH-60J Transport Helicopter

    *CH-47J Transport Helicopter (Contains 2 camouflage patterns)

    *V-107 Transport Helicopter (Contains variations)

    ===Fixed Wing Aircrafts===

    F-1 Support Fighter (Contains variations)

    F-2A Support Fighter (Contains variations)

    F-4EJ Intercept/Support Fighter (Contains variations)

    F-15J Intercepter (Contains variations)

    C-1 Transporter (Contains variations)

    T-2 Advanced Trainer (Contains variations)

    E-767 AWACS (Contains variations)

    ===Others===

    Super Cub scooter and variation

    Real Monar

    Monar Bike

    TypeXX WANDRUNG PANZER

    U.S. Army AH-64D

    XM1082 WANDRUNG PANZER

    BGM-109 Tomahawk cruise missile

    *JGSDF Objects pack

    Ammo Boxes

    Japanese Faces (50 Men, 7 Women)

    13 Japanese Radio Voices

    52 Japanese Environmental Sounds

    6 Original Game Music tracks

    3 Flags

    ======================================

    Thanks all,

    SOURCE


  2. Quote[/b] ]The most wanted Chechen rebel warlord, Shamil Basayev, died when a lorry carrying explosives blew up in Ingushetia, near Chechnya.

    A pro-rebel website said three other militants died with Basayev in the "accidental" explosion. It denied that Russian forces were involved.

    Earlier Russia's FSB security service chief, Nikolai Patrushev, said Basayev was killed in a "special operation".

    Basayev, a key Chechen rebel commander, led many major attacks against Russia.

    President Vladimir Putin said his death was "deserved retribution" for rebel attacks, including the deaths of more than 300 during a school siege.

    The September 2004 attack on a school in Beslan, in the North Caucasus, led to at least 331 deaths. It triggered outrage in Russia and other countries, as many women and children were among the victims.

    The pro-rebel Kavkaz-Center website, citing a member of the rebel parliament, said Basayev had died "a martyr" in the lorry explosion on Monday near the village of Yekazhevo in Ingushetia.

    Basayev identification

    The BBC's Damian Grammaticas in Moscow says Basayev has been top of Russia's most-wanted list for a long time.

    Mr Patrushev was shown on Russian television briefing President Putin on the killing of Basayev.

    The FSB chief said he was among a group of militants killed as they prepared to carry out a "terrorist act" in Ingushetia, which borders on Chechnya.

    "This was made possible because of our operations abroad, primarily in countries where weapons were obtained and then sent on to Russia, where the terrorism was carried out," he told Mr Putin.

    The Russian president said "this is the revenge the bandits deserve for our children in Beslan, for Budyonnovsk, for all the acts of terrorism they have committed in Moscow and in other regions of the Russian Federation, including Ingushetia and the Chechen Republic".

    He announced awards for the Russian special forces involved.

    Ingush Deputy Prime Minister Bashir Aushev, responsible for security, said experts had identified Basayev from the body parts.

    "All his distinguishing features were found," Interfax news agency quoted him as saying.

    He said there were no casualties among Russian security forces, but two civilians were injured in the operation.

    Resistance role

    Akhmed Zakayev, a Chechen rebel envoy in Britain, said the killing of Basayev "will in no way" change the situation in Chechnya.

    "As long as a mutually-acceptable relationship has not been established between Russia and Chechnya, there cannot be a lasting peace," Mr Zakayev told Russia's Ekho Moskvy radio station.

    Russia had previously offered a reward of $10m (Å6m) for the capture of Basayev.

    He claimed responsibility for masterminding the Beslan raid, but blamed the children's deaths on Russian forces, who stormed the school to end the siege.

    Basayev led the first mass hostage-taking by Chechen rebels - in the southern Russian town of Budyonnovsk in 1995. He also claimed to have organised the assault on a Moscow theatre in 2002, during which 129 people died.

    He was a key commander of the resistance after Russian forces invaded Chechnya at the end of 1994.

    When Russia was forced to withdraw its forces after the first Chechen war ended in 1996, Basayev stood for president, but came second to Aslan Maskhadov - the more moderate separatist leader killed by Russian troops in March 2005.

    Basayev also served briefly as prime minister in the self-proclaimed independent Chechen republic of Ichkeria in 1997.

    SOURCE: BBC NEWS


  3. Quote[/b] ]UK officer slams US Iraq tactics

    By Matthew Davis

    BBC News, Washington

    A senior British Army officer has sparked indignation in the US with a scathing article criticising the US Army's performance in Iraq.

    Brigadier Nigel Aylwin-Foster said US tactics early in the occupation had alienated Iraqis and exacerbated problems for the coalition.

    Officers displayed cultural ignorance, self-righteousness, over-optimism and unproductive management, he said.

    The article, in Military Review, has drawn US criticism but also approval.

    'Stiflingly hierarchical'

    In it Brig Aylwin-Foster says American officers displayed such cultural insensitivities that it "arguably amounted to institutional racism" and may have helped spur the insurgency.

    Sometimes good articles do make you angry

    Col Kevin Benson

    School of Advanced Military Studies

    While the army is "indisputably the master of conventional war fighting, it is notably less proficient in... what the US defence community often calls Operations Other Than War," the officer wrote.

    Operations to win the peace in Iraq were "weighed down by bureaucracy, a stiflingly hierarchical outlook, predisposition to offensive operations and a sense that duty required all issues to be confronted head on", he added.

    The British officer - who was commander of a programme to train the Iraqi military - says he wrote the article with the intent to "be helpful to an institution I greatly respect".

    Yet the initial response from many US military officers was hostile.

    'It made me upset'

    Col Kevin Benson, commander of the US Army's elite School of Advanced Military Studies, said his first reaction was that Brig Aylwin-Foster was "an insufferable British snob".

    "Some of this is pretty powerful stuff and it made me a little upset," the colonel told the BBC.

    Col Benson, one of the lead planners for the 3rd US Army's early post-invasion operations, is writing a rebuttal to the Military Review piece.

    "We paid a great deal of attention to the tribal interactions within Iraq and on making commanders in the field aware of the sensitivities," he said.

    "And I certainly don't recognise what he says about the de-professionalisation of the US Army.

    "But sometimes good articles do make you angry. We should publish articles like this. We are in a war and we must always be thinking of how we can improve the way we operate."

    Earlier this month President George W Bush said US troop levels in Iraq would be reduced to several thousand below the pre-election baseline of 138,000 by Spring 2006.

    Those cuts would come in addition to the decrease of 20,000 troops who were in the country largely to provide security during the December elections.


  4. HELP!!!

    I cannot play this demo! Error was "Not found any valid technique when loading special/line2d"

    I tried it on another computer and the error was "Alfa Project Exception" and some cyrillic letters i cannot understand crazy_o.gif


  5. whistle.gif

    Quote[/b] ]Stalin Planned Army of Ape-Man Super-Warriors

    Created: 20.12.2005 11:20 MSK (GMT +3), Updated: 11:20 MSK, 17 hours 36 minutes ago

    SOURCE: MosNews

    Soviet dictator Josef Stalin ordered the creation of Planet of the Apes-style warriors by crossing humans with apes, according to recently uncovered secret documents, the Scotsman.com reports.

    Moscow archives show that in the mid-1920s Russia’s top animal breeding scientist, Ilya Ivanov, was ordered to turn his skills from horse and animal work to the quest for a super-warrior.

    Stalin reportedly told the scientist: “I want a new invincible human being, insensitive to pain, resistant and indifferent about the quality of food they eat.â€

    In 1926 the Politburo in Moscow passed the request to the Academy of Science with the order to build a “living war machineâ€. The order came at a time when the Soviet Union was embarked on a crusade to turn the world upside down, with social engineering seen as a partner to industrialization: new cities, architecture, and a new egalitarian society were being created.

    The Soviet authorities were struggling to rebuild the Red Army after bruising wars.

    And there was intense pressure to find a new labor force, particularly one that would not complain, with Russia about to embark on its first Five-Year Plan for fast-track industrialization.

    Ivanov was highly regarded. He had established his reputation under the last Russian tsar Nicholas II when in 1901 he established the world’s first centre for the artificial insemination of racehorses.

    Ivanov’s ideas were music to the ears of Soviet planners and in 1926 he was dispatched to West Africa with $200,000 to conduct his first experiment in impregnating chimpanzees.

    Meanwhile, a centre for the experiments was set up in Georgia — Stalin’s birthplace — for the apes to be raised.

    Of course Ivanov’s experiments were a total failure. He returned to the Soviet Union, only to see experiments in Georgia to use monkey sperm in human volunteers similarly fail.

    A final attempt to persuade Cuba to lend some monkeys for further experiments reached American ears, with the New York Times reporting on the story, and Havana dropped the idea amid the uproar.

    Ivanov was now in disgrace. His were not the only experiments going wrong: the plan to collectivize farms ended in the 1932 famine in which at least four million died.

    For his expensive failure, he was sentenced to five years in jail, which was later commuted to five years’ exile in the Central Asian republic of Kazakhstan in 1931. A year later he died, reportedly after falling sick while standing on a freezing railway platform.


  6. Quote[/b] ]International Terrorist Reveals All

    Created: 01.12.2005 15:40 MSK (GMT +3), Updated: 15:44 MSK, 12 hours 10 minutes ago

    Bakhtiyar Akhmedkhanov

    The Moscow News

    A Tashkent city court delivered a guilty verdict against members of the Akromiylar movement who took part in the Andizhan events (May, 12-13, 2005). The authorities allege that militants from the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU) were also involved. Shukhrat Masirokhunov, 34, a former chief of the IMU counterintelligence service who was extradited from Pakistan several months ago, is now awaiting trial in Tashkent. He faces 20 years in prison.

    It is widely believed that people join the militants out of despair. Do you come from a poor family?

    Well, my father was a CPSU regional committee functionary in the city of Andizhan. I never walked to or from school but went in a car. When I finished Grade 10, my father gave me a Model 6 Zhiguli sedan. I have a degree in history from the local university.

    I worked at the Russian Communist Youth League (Komsomol) regional committee and then at the regional administration. I engaged in privatization programs and controlled an investment fund. Operations with securities brought as much money in a single day as an ordinary person might not even earn in 10 years.

    So how did a Komsomol activist end up in the IMU?

    Very easy. An ideological vacuum [that came with the breakup of the Soviet Union] was soon filled. First, they talked at the highest possible level about the need to restore Islamic values and then Muslims were made into enemies. I probably had more money than was good for me — drinking, playing around with girls, you know, leading an unhealthy lifestyle. Then I got sick: a stomach ulcer. One day a friend advised me to live like a good Muslim — stop drinking, start praying. I joined a Koran study group. We met and talked. Someone said there was a madrasa in Chechnya that was open to all those willing to join. I went there in 1998.

    There was a training center called Kavkaz (Caucasus), near the village of Avtury, and I was accepted. At first, we studied religion and then took a course of combat training. There were about 50 Uzbeks there. The teachers were Arabs who spoke fluent Russian. It was there that I met Khattab. He was a real soldier and a cheerful guy who liked a good joke. Basayev was just a politician, but a very smart one. After a year of studies, I decided to leave: the local climate was humid and I caught pneumonia. Before leaving, I received instructions to send money to Chechnya to support the Uzbek jamaat. It was also planned to abduct a number of children from rich families in Tashkent, mainly Jewish. They were to be held in Kazakhstan, while ransom would be paid to people based in Chechnya. But after a series of bomb attacks in Tashkent in the winter of 1999, I had to run away. The abductions were carried out by the brothers Yuldashev and Murad Kaziev: We had trained in Chechnya together.

    Eventually, I and several other men got to Afghanistan — via Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, and Iran, to the Char Asyab camp near Jalalabad.

    Did you take part in the Andizhan events?

    No, it was probably the work of the Islamic Jihad of Uzbekistan: they pulled out of the IMU. They are even more radical and intransigent. They are mostly young men.

    But are events of this type not coordinated, for example, by al-Qaeda?

    Al-Qaeda translates as “foundation,†“baseâ€. So we also began with a base, but now everyone is on his own. Information and instructions are issued via the Internet. There was an al-Qaeda camp adjacent to ours in Chechnya, but the two kept entirely separate from each other. We had mainly Uzbeks, Tajiks, and Kyrgyz, while they had Arabs and Europeans, but some recruits occasionally moved from one camp to the other. There was no rigid structure.

    For example, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in Iraq. He is portrayed as a bin Laden representative, but this is not so; he is on his own. We got in touch with him not very long ago, offering to help, but he refused. I met with Zarqawi two years ago. He did not stand out in any special way. At that time, I was higher within our hierarchy.

    Are you acquainted with bin Laden?

    Would not say acquainted, but I have met him on several occasions. He addressed us in Afghanistan in 2000. He said that he was pleased to see representatives from 56 countries there and that we should unite. Some people proposed a series of attacks in a number of countries, for example, blow up a dam near Tashkent or explode a “dirty bombâ€. But he said that “we will have time to do that yet.†He asked whether there were any physicists among us.

    There was also talk to the effect that the raw materials for a “dirty bomb†had been bought in Russia and Ukraine, specifically from a scrap-yard for decommissioned nuclear submarines.

    Are you saying that al-Qaeda has a “dirty bomb�

    Yes, I think it does. At least Takhir (Takhir Yuldashev, the leader of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan who is now in Pakistan or Afghanistan. — Editor.) told me that bomb material had been acquired from Dr. Abdul Kadyr Khan in Pakistan, who, as is known, met with bin Laden in Kandahar. I also know that the Americans found two nuclear research laboratories in Kandahar, but for some reason the fact was suppressed.

    In 2000, I took a 20-day training course in making chemical agents and explosives. A poison can be made literally from any material — cigarettes, honey, and even bread. We worked at a special laboratory near Jalalabad. Our instructor was Abu Habbob Misriy, a former chemistry teacher from Egypt. There were about 200 men taking that course, including 14 or 15 from the North Caucasus who returned to Russia a year later.

    There was a similar laboratory in the Pankisi Gorge in Georgia, where chemical agents were synthesized by a hired scientist, apparently a Russian. That laboratory was then supposed to be moved from Georgia to Pakistan. There were plans to start using bacteriological and chemical weapons. The first targets for attack were to be in Italy and Moscow — why, I do not know.

    Who funds all these camps?

    I do not know about all of them, but we received money and weapons from the Taliban. There were no limitations: we got as much as we asked for. For their part, their funds purportedly came from donations, but there was too much money to have come from donations. Generally, money was not a problem. I spent seven years in Afghanistan and I regularly sent money home — often quite large amounts, up to $10,000. To do that, I had to travel to Iran since Western Union did not operate in Afghanistan. I often went there on business trips. We had no problem crossing the border: A vehicle from the other side would come and take us there.

    What were your duties in Afghanistan?

    I was to expose enemy agents, test and run background checks on our people, and recruit our own agents. The last task was by far the easiest. If a police officer gets $150 to $200 a month, hates his boss and distrusts his state, it is very easy to buy him.

    Each new arrival was placed under a one-month quarantine. He was tested and studied very closely. For example, at lunch somebody knocks his plate out of his hands. How will a person behave in this situation? Or he is given psychotropic drugs before going to bed, and we listen to everything he says in his sleep.

    Did you expose many enemy agents?

    Yes, we did. Once we even caught a Federal Security Service agent. He was called Khashim, from the city of Naberezhnye Chelny. He confessed everything. I even spoke with his mother on the telephone from Afghanistan and tried to get in touch with his FSB minder but unfortunately did not get through. I turned him over to the Taliban. Subsequently, he ended up with the Americans who took him to Guantanamo.

    The enemy agents that we caught were, as a general rule, used to disseminate false or misleading information. We did not kill them but used them for our own interests.

    Do intelligence and security services from other countries also help you?

    Do you know how special operations against militants are conducted in Pakistan? They will pin us down in some place and the situation seems to be hopeless, but then the Pakistani soldiers show us an escape route.

    If Pakistan goes to war with us, the country will explode because the people sympathize with us. So they pretend to be helping the United States, while in fact they are helping us.

    Where is bin Laden? In Pakistan. They cannot catch him? That’s because they do not really want to catch him.

    But you were detained in Pakistan, right?

    Yes, in Peshawar. I was certain that the Pakistanis would let me go. They promised not to extradite me to Uzbekistan. When I was in a local jail, U.S. intelligence officers talked to me on several occasions. I was blindfolded and taken somewhere. I did not see their faces, but they spoke Farsi with me.

    Did they interrogate you?

    No, they tried to recruit me. I was offered cooperation. I was to take part in some operations in the Caucasus, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan and in return for that they promised to get me into Europe or some Arab country. They also said that it was senseless to fight against the Americans in Afghanistan and that our common enemy was the Karimov regime: it had to be brought down for democracy to be established there.

    I refused since I thought that the Pakistanis would release me. I also thought that Takhir would bail me out. It turned out that he had ditched me.

    Have there been other contacts between the Americans and your men?

    They tried to get in touch with Takhir Yuldashev. They met last winter in Kabul. In addition to Takhir, there was also Mawlawi Sayyed (the leader of the Islamic Movement of Afghanistan. — Ed.), as well as other field commanders. They promised to help us.

    The Americans are also playing a double game: They are fighting us but also trying to set us against others.

    What is happening in Afghanistan? Who is in control?

    The Americans control Kabul (but only in the daytime) and several bases, but they are afraid to stick their noses out of them. As a matter of fact, it is not a case of them looking for us but us searching them out. We will mine an area around their base and then fire a missile and wait. First, helicopters arrive and then people — Afghans: they are always sent in first; they are paid $100 to do that. The Afghans are followed by Americans aboard Hummer vehicles, and we blow them up.

    Or do you know how they run that weapons buy-back program? An old Afghan man will bring an old Soviet-era assault rifle and they will pay him $300 in compensation. Then he will go and buy a brand new rifle for just $100. Weapons are easily available. In Tajikistan, it is your Russian servicemen who sell them.

    The Americans will pull out of Afghanistan: there is no way they can hold on there. And they will also have to leave Iraq.

    What is the IMU like today?

    An Islamic movement, party or organization — whichever you like best. Except that it is not IMU but IMT — the Islamic Movement of Turkestan. This is what it is called now because it is comprised of representatives of all Central Asian republics plus Uyghurs.

    Once our organization had a dozen members, but now there are hundreds of members and thousands of supporters in various republics. The movement is led by Takhir Yuldashev, but he is not a real leader. He is, rather, a politician inclined to compromise. The late Namangani was an entirely different matter: People were ready to follow him to the end.

    Where are the militant training camps based?

    Where they have always been based — in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Those that I know of are located on the border between these two countries — in the Khanta Thal gorge and near the village of Wana. Each has about 100 men — from Central Asia and Russia, and there are also Arabs. There are camps in Tajikistan and there are plans to set them up in Kyrgyzstan.

    But surely this is impossible without high-level support?

    It is there all right. In Kyrgyzstan, we are supported by a local drug baron, Erkinbayev, as well as a member of parliament. I do not know his name, but he went to Iran to meet with Makhmud Rustamov, who was in charge of external relations. They discussed Kyrgyz POWs who we had taken during the Batken events.

    One route from Afghanistan to Uzbekistan lies through Tajikistan and then on to Kyrgyzstan. Our men were carried there in vehicles from the Tajik Emergency Situations Ministry. This ministry helped many of our men to get jobs and housing. For example, Rasul Okhunov, a member of our movement, worked for the ministry.

    Incidentally, U.S. instructors — specialists in explosive demolition and commando operations — trained government servicemen at the Ministry’s bases in Kairakkum, Taboshar and Shurabe.

    Have you been subjected to “enhanced interrogation techniques†in Uzbekistan?

    There was no need. We are all professionals. I know that today there is no problem getting any information from a person so I cooperated voluntarily.

    Where is your family now?

    My mother and brother are in jail here in Uzbekistan. My wife and children are in Pakistan. I hope that they will be taken care of.


  7. I knew it!

    Quote[/b] ]U.S. Meteorologist Says Russian Inventors Caused Hurricane Katrina

    Created: 08.09.2005 16:42 MSK (GMT +3), Updated: 17:08 MSK

    SOURCE: MosNews

    A meteorologist in Pocatello, Idaho, claims Japanese gangsters known as the Yakuza used KGB inventions to cause Hurricane Katrina, Wireless Flash reported Thursday.

    Scott Stevens says after looking at NASA satellite photos of the hurricane, he’s is convinced it was caused by electromagnetic generators from ground-based microwave transmitters.

    “There is absolutely zero chance that this is natural, zero,†Villagevoice quoted Stevens as saying after Katrina’s landfall, pointing out suspiciously rectilinear shapes in the satellite-photoed hurricane clouds

    The generators emit a soundwave between three and 30 megahertz and Stevens claims the Russians invented the storm-creating technology back in 1976 and sold it to others in the late 1980s.

    Stevens says the clouds formed by the generators are different from normal clouds and are able to appear out of nowhere and says Katrina had many rotation points that are unusual for hurricanes.

    At least 10 nations and organizations possess the technology, but Stevens suspects the Japanese Yakuza created Katrina in order to make a fortune in the futures market and to get even with the U.S. for the 1945 bombing of Hiroshima.

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