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Tag: Israeli Prime Minister

  • Doha strike shows gov’t does not want to bring back the hostages, former PM Olmert tells Al Jazeera

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    Former prime minister Ehud Olmert told Qatari outlet Al Jazeera that the only explanation for the Doha strike on Hamas is that the Israeli government doesn’t care about the hostages.

    The only reason the attack on Hamas leaders in Doha took place is that the current government is not interested in bringing back the hostages, former prime minister Ehud Olmert claimed during an interview for Qatari outlet Al Jazeera on Saturday.

    “If someone wants to eliminate them at this moment, the only explanation for this operation is that they do not want to negotiate for the release of the hostages,” Olmert said during the interview.

    He further emphasized that “killing a negotiating team means you don’t want negotiations and don’t want the release of the hostages.”

    According to Olmert, Hamas members should be punished, but the strike in Doha “was not in the right place or at the right time.”

    Olmert added that the assassination attempt failed, and, in his view, its execution during the negotiations was “a hasty decision that led to a destructive result.”

    Former Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert in Tel Aviv. August 8, 2024. (credit: TOMER NEUBERG/FLASH90)

    Olmert criticizes current government’s fighting policy

    Olmert expressed that he “regrets” the death of the son of senior Hamas figure Khalil al-Hayya, who was killed in the attack, as well as the injury Hayya’s wife.

    “A child should not be a victim, and his wife was also hurt. We are fighting terrorism, and they will be punished when the time comes, but the family is a different story,” he said.

    He reiterated his opposition to the current government’s policy regarding the ongoing fighting, arguing that “the cabinet and the military gave orders to kill Palestinians indiscriminately, including those not connected to the events of October 7.”

    “This is a wrong policy,” Olmert believes, adding he intends to work with others to bring about the end of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s tenure, claiming that Netanyahu “does not represent Israel and poses a danger to the country.”

    Previous controversial statements Olmert has made to international media

    In May, Olmert told the BBC that what Israel “is currently doing in Gaza is very close to a war crime. Thousands of innocent Palestinians are being killed, as well as many Israeli soldiers.”

    He also told CNN that he can no longer defend Israel against accusations of war crimes later that month.

    Additionally, in July, he called Defense Minister Israel Katz’s “humanitarian city” plan in Gaza a “concentration camp” in an interview with The Guardian.

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  • Israeli leaders speak to reservists ahead of Gaza City operation

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    As Israel starts to mobilize 60,000 reservists for an intensified war in Gaza, its leaders stressed to soldiers on Tuesday the importance of their mission to defeat the Hamas militia which attacked the country nearly two years ago.

    “We are fighting a stubborn and just war without peer,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a video message to soldiers.

    “But what began in Gaza must end in Gaza.”

    Earlier on Tuesday, Israeli Chief of General Staff Eyal Zamir told a meeting of reservists that the Gaza operation would be intensified.

    “We have already begun the ground operation in Gaza – make no mistake,” Zamir said, as reported on the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) Telegram channel.

    “We are already entering places we have never entered before,” he added.

    “We will not stop the war until we defeat this enemy,” he said.

    IDF says top Hamas terrorist eliminated in Gaza City

    Late on Tuesday, the IDF reported that it killed in a joint operation with the Israel Security Agency (ISA), Hazem Awni Naeeem, the terrorist who held hostages Emily Damari, Romi Gonen and Naama Levy in captivity. The three were released in a hostage deal in January.

    The Hamas militant was a senior operative in military intelligence in the Gaza City brigade, the IDF said.

    Israel is planning to capture Gaza City, the largest settlement in the sealed-off strip and home to some 1 million, to rid it of Hamas terrorists, the government has said.

    The move has been denounced by hostage relatives and many others in Israel who worry that an occuupation of Gaza City will endanger the lives of those still held captive.

    According to Israeli sources, 48 hostages are still being held in Gaza, 20 of whom are believed to be alive. Other critics argue that Hamas cannot be defeated militarily and no longer poses a threat to Israel.

    On the ground in Gaza

    At least five children were killed in the latest Israeli attack on southern Gaza, local media reported on Tuesday.

    Palestinian news agency WAFA said the shelling took place in al-Mawasi, an area that has been designated as a humanitarian zone by the Israeli military.

    A spokesman for the military said it was investigating the reports.

    Images circulating on social media show the dead bodies of several children. It was not possible to independently verify them.

    According to WAFA, dozens of people were killed in earlier attacks across Gaza.

    The war was triggered by the Hamas-led attacks on Israel on October 7, 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and more than 250 were taken hostage.

    More than 63,600 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli attacks since the start of the conflict, according to figures from the Hamas-controlled health authorities in the territory.

    The tally does not distinguish between civilians and fighters, but the figures are seen as credible by the United Nations.

    The military’s Arabic spokesman on Tuesday again called on the population to evacuate, suggesting people move south to al-Mawasi, where conditions are said to be catastrophic.

    Aid organisations, citing satellite images, report that more than 70% of homes have been destroyed or damaged, with some areas of Gaza seeing destruction rates as high as 90%.

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  • Malay posts misrepresent unrelated photos as ‘Israeli army officers taken into custody’

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    Unrelated photos appearing to show people being arrested and escorted by police are circulating in Malaysia with false claims they show Dutch police detaining members of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF). The photos previously circulated in reports and posts that made no mention of the individuals being Israeli soldiers, and a spokesperson for the Dutch police told AFP that none of the pictured officers are wearing the force’s official uniform.

    “Dutch police arrested Israeli Major General Shaitan Shaul, commander of the armoured corps, this morning on charges of war crimes in Rafah,” reads the Malay-language caption of a Facebook image shared on August 14, 2025.

    The photo shows a man in handcuffs being escorted by law enforcement officers.

    The caption goes on to claim he was arrested while on holiday at The Hague, adding that Dutch authorities are on a campaign to arrest IDF soldiers after the “International Court of Justice (ICJ) issued a life sentence to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu”.

    Screenshot of the false post taken on August 24, 2025 with a red X added by AFP

    The same Facebook account has also shared other photos alongside claims they show Dutch authorities detaining Israeli military officers.

    <span>Screenshots of the false Facebook post captured on September 1, 2025, with red Xs added by AFP</span>

    Screenshots of the false Facebook post captured on September 1, 2025, with red Xs added by AFP

    Reverse image searches, however, show the pictured individuals are not linked to the Israeli military.

    The ICJ has also not issued any ruling on Netanyahu — though the International Criminal Court (ICC) has issued arrest warrants for him and his former defence minister Yoav Gallant over alleged crimes against humanity and war crimes in Israel’s war in Gaza, including using starvation as a method of warfare (archived link).

    The Hamas attack that sparked the war resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli figures.

    Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed at least 63,459 Palestinians, most of them civilians, according to figures from the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza that the UN considers reliable.

    Unrelated photos

    The first falsely shared photo was previously used in news reports by British newspapers The Telegraph and The Sun, which identified the man as Johnny Morissey, a UK national who was arrested in Spain in September 2022 for his role as a cartel enforcer (archived here and here).

    <span>Screenshot comparison of the false post (left) and the image from The Telegraph's report in September 2022 (right)</span>

    Screenshot comparison of the false post (left) and the image from The Telegraph’s report in September 2022 (right)

    The second photo, showing a policewoman handcuffing a woman who is lying face down, was previously shared on June 1, 2025 by the user AshnaGopal on DeviantArt, a platform for digital artists (archived link).

    The owner of the account told AFP the photo was taken in the United Kingdom. The person who took the photo had not posted it elsewhere but gave the DeviantArt user permission to share it on their account, they said.

    “This is actually a police training exercise, and the woman on the bottom is actually a student volunteer. You can see they are actually in a gym with a foam floor,” they said on August 25.

    <span>Screenshot comparison of the false post (left) and the image posted on DeviantArt (right)</span>

    Screenshot comparison of the false post (left) and the image posted on DeviantArt (right)

    The photo of a woman flanked by two men, one in a police uniform, was previously published by The Daily Mail in an August 2016 article titled, “Collapsed in the street, urinating in doorways and being carted off by police: It’s just another Bank Holiday night on the Toon for Newcastle revellers” (archived link).

    The photo’s caption also makes no reference to the woman being an Israeli soldier.

    <span>Screenshot comparison of the false post (left) and the image published by The Daily Mail in 2016 (right)</span>

    Screenshot comparison of the false post (left) and the image published by The Daily Mail in 2016 (right)

    The photo of a woman covering her face while a policewoman appears to escort her, was used in a September 2019 article by German daily Rheinische Post, which identified the woman as an Instagram beauty influencer who was charged with illegally injecting fillers into people’s lips and noses (archived link).

    <span>Screenshot comparison of the false post (left) and the image published by Rheinische Post in 2019</span>

    Screenshot comparison of the false post (left) and the image published by Rheinische Post in 2019

    A spokesperson for the Dutch national police, Lilian Scholten, told AFP that “no officers wearing a Dutch uniform can be seen” in the falsely shared photos.

    Policemen in the Netherlands traditionally wear dark navy uniforms with bright yellow horizontal stripes across the chest and shoulders and are also equipped with utility belts and body cameras or other gear (archived link).

    <span>Screenshot comparison of the false posts (left) and a photo showing Dutch police in their official uniform (right)</span>

    Screenshot comparison of the false posts (left) and a photo showing Dutch police in their official uniform (right)

    Belgian authorities in Antwerp did briefly hold and question two Israeli citizens attending the Tomorrowland music festival in July 2025 after they were accused of war crimes by pro-Palestinian groups (archived link). Their names were not made public.

    AFP has repeatedly debunked false and misleading claims about the war in Gaza.

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  • The Israeli Crisis Is Testing Biden’s Core Foreign-Policy Claim

    The Israeli Crisis Is Testing Biden’s Core Foreign-Policy Claim

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    President Joe Biden’s core foreign-policy argument has been that his steady engagement with international allies can produce better results for America than the impulsive unilateralism of his predecessor Donald Trump. The eruption of violence in Israel is testing that proposition under the most difficult circumstances.

    The initial reactions of Biden and Trump to the attack have produced exactly the kind of personal contrast Biden supporters want to project. On Tuesday, Biden delivered a powerful speech that was impassioned but measured in denouncing the Hamas terror attacks and declaring unshakable U.S. support for Israel. Last night, in a rambling address in Florida, Trump praised the skill of Israel’s enemies, criticized Israel’s intelligence and defense capabilities, and complained that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had tried to claim credit for a U.S. operation that killed a top Iranian general while Trump was president.

    At this somber moment, Trump delivered exactly the sort of erratic, self-absorbed performance that his critics have said make him unreliable in a crisis. Trump’s remarks seemed designed to validate what Senator Chris Murphy, a Democrat from Connecticut who chairs the Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee that focuses on the Middle East, had told me in an interview a few hours before the former president’s speech. “This is the most delicate moment in the Middle East in decades,” Murphy said. “The path forward to negotiate this hostage crisis, while also preventing other fronts from opening up against Israel, necessitates A-plus-level diplomacy. And you obviously never saw C-plus-level diplomacy from Trump.”

    The crisis is highlighting more than the distance in personal demeanor between the two men. Two lines in Biden’s speech on Tuesday point toward the policy debate that could be ahead in a potential 2024 rematch over how to best promote international stability and advance America’s interests in the world.

    Biden emphasized his efforts to coordinate support for Israel from U.S. allies within and beyond the region. And although Biden did not directly urge Israel to exercise “restraint” in its ongoing military operations against Hamas, he did call for caution. Referring to his conversation with Netanyahu, Biden said, “We also discussed how democracies like Israel and the United States are stronger and more secure when we act according to the rule of law.” White House officials acknowledged this as a subtle warning that the U.S. was not giving Israel carte blanche to ignore civilian casualties as it pursues its military objectives in Gaza.

    Both of Biden’s comments point to crucial distinctions between his view and Trump’s of the U.S. role in the world. Whereas Trump relentlessly disparaged U.S. alliances, Biden has viewed them as an important mechanism for multiplying America’s influence and impact—by organizing the broad international assistance to Ukraine, for instance. And whereas Trump repeatedly moved to withdraw the U.S. from international institutions and agreements, Biden continues to assert that preserving a rules-based international order will enhance security for America and its allies.

    Even more than in 2016, Trump in his 2024 campaign is putting forward a vision of a fortress America. In almost all of his foreign-policy proposals, he promises to reduce American reliance on the outside world. He has promised to make the U.S. energy independent and to “implement a four-year plan to phase out all Chinese imports of essential goods and gain total independence from China.” Like several of his rivals for the 2024 GOP nomination, Trump has threatened to launch military operations against drug cartels in Mexico without approval from the Mexican government. John Bolton, one of Trump’s national security advisers in the White House, has said he believes that the former president would seek to withdraw from NATO in a second term. Walls, literal and metaphorical, remain central to Trump’s vision: He says that, if reelected, he’ll finish his wall across the Southwest border, and last weekend he suggested that the Hamas attack was justification to restore his ban on travel to the U.S. from several Muslim-majority nations.

    Biden, by contrast, maintains that America can best protect its interests by building bridges. He’s focused on reviving traditional alliances, including extending them into new priorities such as “friend-shoring.” He has also sought to engage diplomatically even with rival or adversarial regimes, for instance, by attempting to find common ground with China over climate change.

    These differences in approach likely will be muted in the early stages of Israel’s conflict with Hamas. Striking at Islamic terrorists is one form of international engagement that still attracts broad support from Republican leaders. And in the Middle East, Biden has not diverged from Trump’s strategy as dramatically as in other parts of the world. After Trump severely limited contact with the Palestinian Authority, Biden has restored some U.S. engagement, but the president hasn’t pushed Israel to engage in full-fledged peace negotiations, as did his two most recent Democratic predecessors, Bill Clinton and Barack Obama. Instead, Biden has continued Trump’s efforts to normalize relations between Israel and surrounding Sunni nations around their common interest in countering Shiite Iran. (Hamas’s brutal attack may have been intended partly to derail the ongoing negotiations among the U.S., Israel, and Saudi Arabia that represent the crucial next stage of that project.) Since the attack last weekend, Trump has claimed that Hamas would not have dared to launch the incursion if he were still president, but he has not offered any substantive alternative to Biden’s response.

    Yet the difference between how Biden and Trump approach international challenges is likely to resurface before this crisis ends. Even while trying to construct alliances to constrain Iran, Biden has also sought to engage the regime through negotiations on both its nuclear program and the release of American prisoners. Republicans have denounced each of those efforts; Trump and other GOP leaders have argued, without evidence, that Biden’s agreement to allow Iran to access $6 billion in its oil revenue held abroad provided the mullahs with more leeway to fund terrorist groups like Hamas. And although both parties are now stressing Israel’s right to defend itself, if Israel does invade Gaza, Biden will likely eventually pressure Netanyahu to stop the fighting and limit civilian losses well before Trump or any other influential Republican does.

    Murphy points toward another distinction: Biden has put more emphasis than Trump on fostering dialogue with a broad range of nations across the region. Trump’s style “was to pick sides, and that meant making enemies and adversaries unnecessarily; that is very different from Biden’s” approach, Murphy told me. “We don’t know whether anyone in the region right now can talk sense into Hamas,” Murphy said, “but this president has been very careful to keep lines of communication open in the region, and that’s because he knows through experience that moments can come, like this, where you need all hands on deck and where you need open lines to all the major players.”

    In multiple national polls, Republican and Democratic voters now express almost mirror-image views on whether and how the U.S. should interact with the world. For the first time in its annual polling since 1974, the Chicago Council on Global Affairs this year found that a majority of Republicans said the U.S. would be best served “if we stay out of world affairs,” according to upcoming results shared exclusively with The Atlantic. By contrast, seven in 10 Democrats said that the U.S. “should take an active part in world affairs.”

    Not only do fewer Republicans than Democrats support an active role for the U.S. in world affairs, but less of the GOP wants the U.S. to compromise with allies when it does engage. In national polling earlier this year by the nonpartisan Pew Research Center, about eight in 10 Democrats said America should take its allies’ interests into account when dealing with major international issues. Again in sharp contrast, nearly three-fifths of GOP partisans said the U.S. instead “should follow its own interests.”

    As president, Trump both reflected and reinforced these views among Republican voters. Trump withdrew the U.S. from the World Health Organization, the United Nations Human Rights Council, the Paris climate accord, and the nuclear deal with Iran that Obama negotiated, while also terminating Obama’s Trans-Pacific Partnership trade talks. Biden effectively reversed all of those decisions. He rejoined both the Paris Agreement and the WHO on his first days in office, and he brought the U.S. back into the Human Rights Council later in 2021. Although Biden did not resuscitate the TPP specifically, he has advanced a successor agreement among nations across the region called the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework. Biden has also sought to restart negotiations with Iran over its nuclear program, though with little success.

    Peter Feaver, a public-policy and political-science professor at Duke University, told me he believes that Trump wasn’t alone among U.S. presidents in complaining that allies were not fully pulling their weight. What makes Trump unique, Feaver said, is that he didn’t see the other side of the ledger. “Most other presidents recognized, notwithstanding our [frustrations], it is still better to work with allies and that the U.S. capacity to mobilize a stronger, more action-focused coalition of allies than our adversaries could was a central part of our strength,” said Feaver, who served as a special adviser on the National Security Council for George W. Bush. “That’s the thing that Trump never really understood: He got the downsides of allies, but not the upsides. And he did not realize you do not get any benefits from allies if you approach them in the hyper-transactional style that he would do.”

    Biden, Feaver believes, was assured an enthusiastic reception from U.S. allies because he followed the belligerent Trump. But Biden’s commitment to restoring alliances, Feaver maintains, has delivered results. “There’s no question in my mind that Biden got better results from the NATO alliance [on Ukraine] in the first six months than the Trump team would have done,” Feaver said.

    As the Middle East erupts again, the biggest diplomatic hurdle for Biden won’t be marshaling international support for Israel while it begins military operations; it will be sustaining focus on what happens when they end, James Steinberg, the dean of the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, told me. “The challenge here is how do you both reassure Israel and send an unmistakably tough message to Hamas and Iran without leading to an escalation in this crisis,” said Steinberg, who served as deputy secretary of state for Obama and deputy national security adviser for Clinton. “That’s where the real skill will come: Without undercutting the strong message of deterrence and support for Israel, can they figure out a way to defuse the crisis? Because it could just get worse, and it could widen.”

    In a 2024 rematch, the challenge for Biden would be convincing most Americans that his bridges can keep them safer than Trump’s walls. In a recent Gallup Poll, Americans gave Republicans a 22-percentage-point advantage when asked which party could keep the nation safe from “international terrorism and military threats.” Republicans usually lead on that measure, but the current advantage was one of the GOP’s widest since Gallup began asking the question, in 2002.

    This new crisis will test Biden on exceedingly arduous terrain. Like Clinton and Obama, Biden has had a contentious relationship with Netanyahu, who has grounded his governing coalition in the far-right extremes of Israeli politics and openly identified over the years with the GOP in American politics. In this uneasy partnership with Netanyahu, Biden must now juggle many goals: supporting the Israeli prime minister, but also potentially restraining him, while avoiding a wider war and preserving his long-term goal of a Saudi-Israeli détente that would reshape the region. It is exactly the sort of complex international puzzle that Biden has promised he can manage better than Trump. This terrible crucible is providing the president with another opportunity to prove it.

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    Ronald Brownstein

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  • Israel elections: PM Lapid concedes defeat; Netanyahu set to become next Prime Minister

    Israel elections: PM Lapid concedes defeat; Netanyahu set to become next Prime Minister

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    Israeli Prime Minister Yair Lapid Thursday conceded defeat in the general elections and congratulated opposition leader Benjamin Netanyahu, whose coalition of right-wing parties secured a comfortable majority in parliament to form the next government and end the political impasse plaguing the country.

    With 99 per cent of the ballots counted, Netanyahu-led right-wing bloc has taken a comfortable lead with 64 seats in the 120-member Knesset, paving way for his triumphant return.

    Lapid, who has served as interim prime minister for the past four months, said that he called Netanyahu and congratulated him on his victory.

    He further added that he’s instructed all departments of the Prime Minister’s Office to prepare for an orderly transfer of power.

    “The State of Israel is above any political consideration,” Lapid said in a tweet. “I wish Netanyahu luck for the sake of the people of Israel and the State of Israel.”

    Israelis voted on Tuesday for an unprecedented fifth time in four years to break the political impasse that has paralysed the Jewish nation.

    According to the latest updates from the Central Elections Committee, Netanyahu’s Likud party will receive 31 seats, Prime Minister Lapid’s Yesh Atid 24, Religious Zionism 14, National Unity 12, Shas 11 and United Torah Judaism will have eight seats.

    Among the smaller parties to have crossed the 3.25 per cent threshold required to qualify for the Knesset or parliament representation, Yisrael Beytenu will have six lawmakers, Ra’am is likely to win five seats along with Hadash-Ta’al. The Labour Party will win just four seats, according to the update.

    The Left-wing Meretz party, which is hovering close to the threshold, seems to have slipped slightly even further from qualification.

    Arab party Balad, which split from the broader coalition of the Arab parties to go independent, also seems to be failing the threshold mark.

    The Netanyahu-led government would see a sharp drop in women in the coalition.

    Current results project 9 female lawmakers in parties that back the former prime minister, with none among the ultra-Orthodox factions, according to the Times of Israel newspaper.

    Based on these results, the likely Netanyahu-led coalition will have nine female lawmakers six in his Likud party and three from the far-right Religious Zionism, though the figure could end up rising through ministerial appointments.

    The outcome marks a stunning comeback for Netanyahu, who is currently on trial in three corruption cases, after a short stint in opposition.

    Israel has been locked in an unprecedented period of political stalemate since 2019, when Netanyahu, the country’s longest-serving leader was charged with bribery, fraud and breach of trust.

    About 6.78 million Israeli citizens were eligible to elect their 25th Knesset.

    Some 210,720 new voters were able to vote for the first time, accounting for about four to five seats, adding an interesting dimension to the polls.

    Netanyahu’s return to power is likely to see an upward trajectory in Indo-Israel ties.

    An advocate of strong bilateral ties with India, Netanyahu was the second Israeli Prime Minister to visit India in January 2018. Prime Minister Narendra Modi made his historic visit to Israel, the first by an Indian Prime Minister, in July 2017 when the chemistry’ between the two leaders became the subject of intense discussion.

    India and Israel elevated their bilateral relations to a strategic partnership during Modi’s visit to Israel. Since then, the relationship between the two countries has focused on expanding knowledge-based partnership, which includes collaboration in innovation and research, including boosting the ‘Make in India’ initiative.

    India’s relations with Israel have remained steady and strong even with the incumbent leadership, showing distinct signs of further progress with I2U2 (India, Israel, the United States and the United Arab Emirates) and discussions around a Free Trade Agreement, but it has not matched the heightened hype so visible with Netanyahu in power.

    For many years, Netanyahu, Israel’s longest serving premier, appeared to be politically invincible. But he met with a rude jolt in 2021 after being ousted by an unprecedented coalition of parties whose only common goal was to see his ouster.

    Born in Tel Aviv in 1949, Netanyahu holds the record of being the longest-serving Prime Minister in the country’s history.

    Having served in the position earlier between 1996 and 1999, Netanyahu in 2020 surpassed the record held by one of the Jewish state’s founding leaders, David Ben-Gurion.
     

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