How to Disintegrate a City
by
Tom Engelhardt
and Michael Schwartz
by Tom Engelhardt
and Michael Schwartz
DIGG THIS
Once again
last week, the President and his men surged into the headlines,
announcing that we had just zipped past yet another of those Iraqi
"turning points." Or, as George W. Bush put
it while speaking at the Pentagon (and perhaps dreaming of the
days back in 2005 when he could still happily mention "victory"
15
times and "progress" 28 times in a speech about Iraq): "The
surge is working. And as a return on our success in Iraq, we've
begun bringing some of our troops home. The surge has done more
than turn the situation in Iraq around it has opened the
door to a major strategic victory in the broader war on terror."
A few years
ago, of course, the Bush administration was still "turning corners"
(around which, invariably, would be an unexpected group of insurgents
armed with RPGs and IEDs). Now, in a change of linguistic pace,
the corners have vanished (perhaps because we haven't liked who's
lurking there) and we're opening doors instead. If history is any
guide, behind the President's "door" will prove to be not the
lady but the tiger.
In the meantime,
our surly Vice President has just surged past the American people.
In an interview
in Oman with ABC's Martha Raddatz, there was this pungent exchange:
"Q:
…Two-thirds of Americans say [the Iraq War]'s not worth fighting,
and they're looking at the value gain versus the cost in American
lives, certainly, and Iraqi lives.
"THE VICE
PRESIDENT: So?"
Perhaps the
most revealing imagery of the week, however, came from the President's
candidate for the Oval Office in January 2009. On completing a visit
to "Iraq," Senator John McCain issued a ringing statement on the
war that began
this way: "Today in Iraq, America and our allies stand on the precipice
of winning a major victory against radical Islamic extremism." The
"precipice of victory" and, next perhaps, the "abyss of victory"?
Go back two
years and that word "precipice" was a
commonplace in Washington as a rattled Bush administration faced
a sectarian civil war in Iraq. Now, as any independent or foreign
journalist would tell
you (though the American press has generally been more upbeat),
the Iraqis are living in that abyss,
down which Sen. McCain evidently stares and sees victory. They are
living in a hell,
a country so thoroughly dismantled that the brave British journalist
Patrick Cockburn recently claimed
"Iraq" was now little more than a "geographical expression."
Outside the
heavily fortified Green Zone, much of Baghdad is a nightmare. Just
consider a walk that Nir Rosen took for Rolling
Stone magazine in the Dora district of Baghdad ("…now a
ghost town. This is what 'victory' looks like in a once upscale
neighborhood of Iraq: Lakes of mud and sewage fill the streets.
Mountains of trash stagnate in the pungent liquid. Most of the windows
in the sand-colored homes are broken, and the wind blows through
them, whistling eerily..."); or watch a video shot by Iraqi journalist
Ghaith Abdul-Ahad for the British Guardian portraying the
massive walls that now encase so many Iraqi neighborhoods, or
the
cemeteries he visited that hold some of Iraq's recently slaughtered
citizens.
Soon,
General David Petraeus will report to the President and Congress
on "progress" in Iraq. In the meantime, Senator McCain's website
just "re-released" "Fighting
Islamic Extremists: Progress in Iraq," which "features a four
year timeline of John McCain's unrelenting call for a new strategy
for victory in Iraq."
Knowing that
this may be their future, Iraqis must finally be on the verge of
erupting with joy in the streets of their capital, just as our Vice
President predicted
they would before this horror ever began. If, however, you want
to grasp the real nature of what's taken place in Baghdad these
last years, check out the latest monumental piece by Tomdispatch
regular Michael Schwartz, author of the upcoming book War
Without End: The Iraq Debacle in Context. It's surely the
first history of the full "battle of Baghdad" from April 2003 to
this moment. ~ Tom
The
Battle of Baghdad
Iraq's Most Fearsome Militia, the U.S. military,
on the Offensive
By Michael
Schwartz
In early
April, General David Petraeus, the flavor of the year in American
military officers, will return to Washington to report to President
Bush and the Democratic Congress on the state of post-surge Iraq.
His report will be upbeat, with cautious notes thrown in, and
the reception will be warm. The Republicans will congratulate
the President, hoping that Americans will stop complaining and
finally learn to tolerate, if not love, his war; the Democrats
will be quietly unhappy because they would like Iraq to remain
a major election issue.
In the meantime,
the Iraqis will continue to endure the results of the surge, yet
another brutal chapter in the endless war that once promised them
liberation.
Over the
course of five years, Baghdad, the capital city of Iraq, has been
transformed from a metropolis into an urban desert of half-destroyed
buildings and next to no public services, dotted by partially
deserted, mutually hostile mini-ghettos that used to be neighborhoods,
surrounded by cement barriers reminiscent of medieval fortifications.
The most prominent of these ghettos is the heavily fortified city-inside-a-city
dubbed the Green Zone, where Iraq's most fearsome militia, the
United States military, is headquartered. It is governed by the
Americans and by the American-sponsored Iraqi government, headed
by Prime Minister Nouri al Maliki.
The remaining
ghettos, large and small, are governed by local militias, most
of them sworn enemies of the United States and the Maliki regime.
In the expanding Shia areas of the capital, the local guardians
are often members of the Mahdi Army, the militia of cleric Moqtada
al-Sadr that has opposed the American presence since the occupation
began. In the shrinking Sunni-controlled parts of the city, the
local guardians are usually members of the Sahwa forces (the "Awakening"
or, in U.S. military jargon, "Concerned Local Citizens"). The
Americans have ceded to them control of their cement-enclosed
domains as long as they discontinue insurgent attacks elsewhere.
As Baghdadi
citizens continue to flee the threat of violence, ethnic cleansing,
and economic destitution, the city waits whether for a
definitive military confrontation or some less violent change
that will bring its long ordeal to an end.
How did
this all come to be?
Ethnic
Cleansing Arrives in Baghdad
When the
American occupation of Baghdad began in April 2003, about half
of the city's neighborhoods had no particular ethnic character.
In late 2004, however, thousands of Sunnis, driven out of Falluja
and other insurgent strongholds by American offensives, began
arriving in Baghdad. In increasingly crowded neighborhoods, ethnic
friction rose, as did Sunni anger at a Shia-dominated government
that sent its troops into battle beside American ones.
Sunni militias,
originally organized to deal with local crime (after the Americans
dismantled the Iraqi police force) began to turn on Shia residents
in some of the capital's 200 mixed neighborhoods. Eventually,
scattered acts of harassment were transformed into systematic
campaigns of expulsion, justified by the housing needs of a rapidly
growing multitude of Sunni refugees, and as retaliation for government-supported
assaults on Sunni cities. During 2005, the first stream of displaced
Shia began arriving in Baghdad's vast, already overcrowded Shia
slum of Sadr City and in the Shia cities of southern Iraq.
In January
2006, the bombing of the revered Shia shrine, the Golden Dome
mosque in Samarra, triggered sweeping Shia reprisals against Sunni
communities. In the capital, a struggle for the dominance of mixed
neighborhoods began. Deadly battles between Shia and Sunni militias
featured all weapons and methods of slaughter available, including
car bombs and death squads. Whichever side expelled the other,
minority groups including Christians, Kurds, and Palestinians
found themselves unwelcome and began to flee (or die). Ethnic
cleansing now lay at the center of the spiraling violence in Baghdad.
The Americans
Enter the Battle
In May 2006,
American forces first joined "the battle for Baghdad" in a significant
way. With the initiation of Operation Together Forward, the U.S.
military began transferring combat brigades to the capital in
an attempt to take control of Sunni and Shia militia strongholds.
This strategy,
however, quickly proved itself ineffective. In August 2006, the
New York Times reported that sectarian violence was "spiraling
out of control." By the fall, the number
of insurgents attacks in Baghdad had increased by 26%, and
violent deaths reported at the city morgue had quadrupled.
The seeming paradox of an American pacification campaign generating
more violence can be explained by looking at the mechanics of
the offensive.
Despite
their involvement in ethnic violence, the Sunni and Shia militias
that the Americans sought to root out were also the forces of
law and order in Baghdad's otherwise lawless neighborhoods. They
directed traffic, arrested and/or punished common criminals, and
mediated disputes. They also protected neighborhoods from outsiders,
including American or Iraqi soldiers, suicide bombers, death squads,
and criminal gangs.
Before the
Americans entered the fray, the militia strongholds had been the
least vulnerable to sectarian attack. After all, their streets
were saturated with armed men on the lookout for their enemies.
Ethnic violence was largely taking place in contested mixed neighborhoods.
In entering
these strongholds, the U.S. military won tactical victories, chasing
surviving militia members off the streets or even out of neighborhoods,
which, without their local police and defense forces, were suddenly
vulnerable to sectarian attack.
This vulnerability
was all-too-vividly illustrated in Sadr City, the stronghold of
the Sadrist movement. As the home base of the Mahdi Army, this
city-within-a-city had not experienced a car bomb attack in two
years until American troops sealed it off, set
up check points at key entrance and exit points, and began
patrols aimed at hunting down Mahdi Army leaders they suspected
of participating in death squads and of kidnapping an American
soldier. Local residents told New
York Times reporter Sabrina Tavernise that the operation had
"forced Mahdi Army members who were patrolling the streets to
vanish." Soon after, the first car bombs were detonated.
The violence
reached a crescendo
in November 2006, when a coordinated set of five car bombs killed
at least 215 and wounded 257. Qusai Abdul-Wahab, a Sadrist member
of parliament, spoke for many residents of the community when
he told the Associated
Press that the "occupation forces are fully responsible for
these acts."
Such events
generated immense bitterness among Shia, who took them as proof
that the Americans and the Iraqi government were concerned only
with attacking the Mahdis, not suppressing jihadist attacks.
This encouraged their support of the death squads, which sought
to exact retribution on the Sunni communities they believed were
harboring the bombers.
The Americans
had also facilitated these retaliatory attacks. Sunni insurgents
in the Baghdad suburbs of Balad and Duluiyah, for example, were
suspected of slaughtering 17 Shia workers in a particularly well-publicized
instance of sectarian brutality. American troops and their Iraqi
allies cordoned off the two districts and invaded the neighborhoods.
The invading forces quickly silenced the insurgent militias, leaving
the streets unpatrolled. Soon after, Shia death squads made their
appearance. Some of them had apparently been organized inside (Shia)
Iraqi military units that accompanied the Americans into the Sunni
communities. According to the Washington
Post, "A police officer in Duluiyah, Capt. Qaid al-Azawi, accused
American forces of standing by in Balad while [Shia] militiamen
in police cars and police uniforms slaughtered Sunnis." In the face
of these attacks, large numbers of residents began to flee.
And so the
cycle of slaughter escalated on all sides, while neighborhoods
began to be emptied of the members of whichever sect was losing
ground locally. As with many other developments in the war, this
unmitigated disaster for Baghdad residents was only a partial
one for the American occupation. For the Bush administration,
the storm of violence in the Iraqi capital had at least one silver
lining: the occupation's two main enemies were now at each other's
throats. As an American intelligence official told investigative
reporter Seymour
Hersh, "The White House believes that if American troops stay
in Iraq long enough with enough troops the bad guys
will end up killing each other."
The Surge
As Operation
Together Forward continued, intense violence spread across the
city. American combat fatalities reached a two-year high of 113
in November 2006, not in itself surprising since American troops
were entering militia strongholds. Other statistics, however,
defied American expectations.
The number
of insurgent attacks, which should have declined, increased dramatically.
A little under 100 a day through the first half of 2006, they
jolted up to 140 a day soon after the offensive started, and then
hovered between 160 and 180 for the rest of the year. The number
of lethal bombings, a main target of the offensive, also rose.
According to U.S. military statistics published by the Brookings
Institution, in late 2005 they rose from under 20 to over 40 per
month, and then started upward again as the American offensive
began in the late spring of 2006, reaching 69 in December of that
year. Deaths associated with these bombings soared from under
500 per month in early 2006 to almost 1,000 in the second half
of the year. Population displacement also reached new heights
especially in communities where the Americans were most
active.
In response,
the Americans sought a new plan for pacifying Baghdad. It would
become known as "the
surge." Rather than altering the fundamental premises of Operation
Together Forward, it diagnosed the ferocious response as evidence
that insufficient force had been applied.
Now, tens
of thousands of new American troops would be poured into Baghdad,
and to Operation Together Forward's strategy would be added tactics
from the 2004 assault on the Sunni city of Falluja. Each target
area would now first be surrounded to prevent insurgents from escaping.
Then, once the battle was joined, overwhelming firepower would be
brought to bear. As Captain Paul Fowler had explained to Boston
Globe reporter Anne Barnard during the Falluja fighting,
''The only way to root out [the insurgents] is to destroy everything
in your path."
As in Falluja,
the new surge plan also called for the Americans to remain in
the community to prevent the insurgents from returning and to
supervise the Iraqi army units they had led into battle.
The Battle
of Haifa Street
Even before
the surge strategy was announced by President Bush, even before
the new troops arrived, the first battle was launched. Before
dawn on January 9, 2007, the Americans and Iraqis attacked a Sunni
insurgent stronghold on Haifa Street just outside the Green Zone.
Washington
Post reporters Sudarsan Raghavan and Joshua Partlow described
the kind of firepower brought to bear once the battle for the
street began:
"From
rooftops and doorways, the gunmen fired AK-47 assault rifles and
machine guns. Snipers also were targeting the U.S. and Iraqi soldiers.
U.S. soldiers started firing back with 50-caliber machine guns
mounted on their Stryker armored vehicles. They used TOW missiles
and Mark-19 grenade launchers. The F-15 fighter jets strafed rooftops
with cannons, while the [Apache helicopters] fired Hellfire missiles."
After 11
hours of death and devastation, 1,000 American and Iraqi troops
were able to begin house-to-house searches, arresting or killing
suspected insurgents.
One week
later, McClatchy
News reporters Nancy Youssef and Zaineb Obeid visited Haifa
Street. They found massive destruction, omnipresent U.S. military
forces locking down virtually all activity, widespread suffering
among residents, and ongoing fighting. Elements of the Shia-dominated
Iraqi army had already begun a systematic campaign to push the
Sunni majority from the neighborhood:
"A
44-year-old Haifa Street resident, who asked to be identified
only as Abu Mohammed for security reasons, said that only three
or four [Sunni] families of an estimated 60 families remained
on his block. He said no vehicles were allowed to drive through
the area and that there was no electricity, kerosene or running
water. [U.S.] Snipers have taken positions on the rooftops."
To the fleeing
Sunnis, it seemed the Americans were sponsoring ethnic cleansing.
A resident commented: "The Americans are doing nothing, as if
they are backing the militias. If this plan continues for one
more week, I don't think you will find one family left on Haifa
Street."
By the end
of January, before the first surge reinforcements even arrived,
the battle of Haifa Street was over. A large contingent of American
soldiers would remain in the area, while a vast cement barrier
with a handful of heavily armored gates would be put in place,
effectively separating the community from the rest of the city.
The dislodged insurgents retreated into intermittent guerrilla
war, organizing some 20 attacks on the Americans each month
a sharp reduction from the 74 much larger battles they had fought
in January. U.S. forces would mount an average of 34 combat patrols
each day aimed at capturing or suppressing them. In January 2008,
plans for an American
departure from Haifa Street were still tentative.
The Results
of the Surge
Haifa Street
would become typical of many Baghdad communities that soon felt
the full impact of the surge offensive. A year later, the neighborhood
would still bear all the marks of battle. There had been no effort
to restore public services, including the electrical grid or the
system that should have supplied potable water; there were no
medical services, nor was there any public transportation.
The
New York Post's Ralph Peters summarized the posture of
the Maliki government inside the Green Zone bluntly: "Iraq's government
isn't much help none, as far as Haifa Street's revival is
concerned." The American military commander on Haifa Street told
him that the U.S. was relying on "spontaneous economic development"
local citizens were expected to develop the area through
their own efforts, with the help of a limited number of "micro-loans"
(a few hundred dollars each) from the military's meager non-combat
funds. It was no surprise, then, that, aside from a few food markets,
there was no economy to speak of.
In the meantime,
tens of thousands of mainly Sunni residents had left, with large
parts of the area transformed from Sunni to Shia, and smaller
sections moving in the other direction.
In January
2008, Lieutenant Colonel Tony Aguto, the U.S. commander in Haifa
Street, estimated that some 50,000 of the area's 150,000 residents
had been displaced in the previous year. In Baghdad as a whole,
the United Nations High Commissioner on Refugees would estimate
that the heavy surge fighting in the first half of 2007 was producing
90,000 refugees a month, the bulk from Baghdad; the 2007 total
reached 800,000.
As ethnic
cleansing in Haifa Street and elsewhere was completed, the rate
of refugee production began to drop, declining to 30,000 by December
2007. Displaced Baghdadis searching desperately for places to
settle faced the overwhelming challenge of supporting families
in a largely dormant economy with dwindling government support.
This was not, commented Lt. Col. Aguto, a problem the Americans
needed to address. "It is," he said, "the job of the Iraqi government
to sort this out." The Iraqi government remained mute on the subject.
The Ebb
of the Surge
As the battle
of Haifa Street illustrated, the surge amplified violence in the
capital significantly, as for six months the Americans moved in
on one neighborhood after another, using all the firepower at
their command. When the heavy fighting ended in an invaded neighborhood,
the Americans sought to consolidate their military victory by
erecting those now-ubiquitous concrete barriers, ensuring the
ethnic segregation of each neighborhood or partial neighborhood.
These became demarcation lines and no-go boundaries in the city's
civil war, the borders of a dis-integrated city.
The walls
insured that there would be little or no physical, social, or
economic contact among ghettoized, ethnically cleansed neighborhoods,
even ones that had previously depended upon such intercourse for
daily sustenance. The city's already compromised economy thus
suffered another body blow. Residents of these newly defined ghettos,
unable to get to jobs, became increasingly desperate, and, searching
for solutions, lent support to the local militias that spoke and
acted on their behalf.
As displacement
efforts continued, the Shia militias essentially moved east to
west across Baghdad, creating ever more Shia areas from previously
mixed and Sunni neighborhoods. Mainly in the western and southern
parts of Baghdad, the Sunni militias persevered, consolidating
their control in areas that the Americans did not invade.
The ghettoization
of Baghdad, which had begun relatively modestly in early 2005,
reached a crescendo in early 2007 with the American surge and
was largely completed by the fall of 2007. By that time, what
had once been a city split between Sunnis and Shia had been transformed
into a 75% Shia capital. The American military made its presence
felt at checkpoints, at many small bases established around the
city, and by patrols into neighborhoods now demarcated by cement
barriers. The localities, however, were still governed by the
local militias in what was no longer city, but a ghettoized collection
of micro-city-states.
The End
of the Surge
After a
spring and summer of heavy fighting, however, the Americans were
hardly close to pacifying the city. In a way, the surge had worsened
the situation. Before it began, in many neighborhoods neither
Sunni nor Shia militias were dominant; by the middle of 2007,
virtually every community had its own mini-government, usually
dominated by a militia that was hostile both to the occupation
and the central government. To assert centralized authority over
the city, each neighborhood would have had to be invaded again.
Without
announcing a change in policy, the Americans functionally abandoned
the surge in the late summer 2007 in favor of a "live and let
live" program of cooptation. On the Sunni side of the street,
the Americans adopted a version of the Sunni "Awakening" movement
that had arisen without American encouragement in Anbar Province
the previous year, negotiating armed truces with their insurgent
adversaries on a community-by-community basis. The Americans conceded
to the militias the right to police their own communities, discontinued
American offensives aimed at dislodging them, and halted the hated
home invasions aimed at arresting or killing suspected insurgents.
In exchange, the insurgents were to rein in attacks on American
troops and suppress jihadist activity in their neighborhoods,
thus curtailing the planning and execution of car bomb and other
terrorist attacks on nearby Shia communities.
On the Shia
side, the Americans essentially negotiated a ceasefire with the
Mahdi Army, announced publicly as a unilateral stand-down by its
leader Moqtada Al Sadr. The Sadrists curtailed the planting of
lethal roadside bombs against the Americans and no longer sought
to ambush American and Iraqi army troops moving through their
neighborhoods. The Americans curtailed their raids and offensives
in Sadrist neighborhoods and spent far less effort hunting down
and arresting Sadrist leaders, except when they specifically broke
the ceasefire.
The result
of this double détente was a dramatic reduction in violence in
Baghdad. With the Americans keeping their side of the bargain,
the huge running battles associated with American attacks on Sunni
strongholds like Haifa Street disappeared, and even the smaller
battles resulting from American attempts to capture specific insurgents
subsided. In return, attacks against American forward bases and
convoys in Baghdad dwindled; and the jihadists, largely
expelled from Sunni insurgent communities, either demobilized
or moved to northern Iraq where negotiations with the insurgents
had not taken place.
This was,
however, little more than an armed truce among enemies, a truce
that actually strengthened the militias within their own communities.
The Sunni insurgents, now validated as legitimate police and even
paid and armed by the Americans, began making political demands
for the restoration of services, as well as for infrastructure
reconstruction and job-creation programs for their desperate constituents,
all the while denouncing the Iraqi government as a creature of
U.S. and Iranian policy.
The Mahdi
Army militias, having extended their influence into previously
mixed neighborhoods, used the truce to spread their own meager
but meaningful social service programs and demand increased access
to resources that might revive the economy of the city. Their
national spokesmen continued to insist that the country could
not begin genuine reconstruction until the Americans left, and
that the barriers they had played such a role in erecting
sectarian as well as cement were removed.
Though many
Baghdad communities are now experiencing their lowest levels of
violence in two years, their situations are neither viable, nor
stable. The cement barriers, which help to reduce violence, also
make social and economic life nearly impossible. Most Baghdadis
are now locked into their individual ghettos, terrified of strangers,
often afraid to send their children to schools across barriers
and neighborhoods, and unable to reach previously held jobs. Employers,
deprived of needed workers and customers, have shuttered their
establishments. The economy has largely ground to a halt.
For most
of Baghdad, the Iraqi government is simply irrelevant. It has
no administrative apparatus in any of these communities or the
capacity to restore needed services. Its only visible presence,
the Iraqi army, is commanded or controlled by American officers;
insofar as Iraqi soldiers do act independently, they follow the
leadership of Shia militia commanders, not the central government.
In neighborhoods even a few hundred feet from the Green Zone,
the Iraqi government does not exist.
The Americans
remain a major presence, but not a sovereign one. They maintain
the most fearsome of the militias in Baghdad, capable of militarily
overwhelming any adversary, but incapable of creating stable rule,
even in cement-encircled ghost areas like Haifa Street. They cannot
deliver electricity, or water, or jobs, or even, often enough,
safe passage to the next neighborhood.
As early
as May of 2006, Nir
Rosen, one of the most informed and insightful journalists
writing about Iraq, presciently described the American military's
unenviable position in this way: "[T]he American Army is lost
in Iraq, as it has been since it arrived. Striking at Sunnis,
striking at Shias, striking at mostly innocent people. Unable
to distinguish between anybody, certainly unable to wield any
power, except on the immediate street corner where it's located…
[T]he Americans are just one more militia lost in the anarchy."
This description was never truer than today in Baghdad.
The residents
of Baghdad are waiting. They are waiting for the walls around
their neighborhood to come down, public transportation to be restored,
and roads to be re-opened so they can begin to move around the
city in something like a normal fashion. They wait for public
services to be rebuilt so they can count on turning on the lights,
having clean water come out of taps, and perhaps even being able
to contribute to "spontaneous economic development." They wait
for employers to begin rehiring, so they can begin to support
their suffering families.
They
wait for the Americans to leave.
In a few weeks,
General David Petraeus will tell the President and Congress that
violence is dramatically reduced in Baghdad, that there are signs
of political progress inside the Green Zone, and that these gains
will be lost if the United States does not "stay the course." He
will not say that Baghdad is an urban desert of half-destroyed buildings
and next to no public services, dotted by partially deserted, mutually
hostile mini-ghettos that used to be neighborhoods, surrounded by
cement barriers reminiscent of medieval fortifications.
March
24, 2008
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
who runs the Nation Institute's Tomdispatch.com,
is the co-founder of the American
Empire Project. He
is the author of several books, including The
Last Days of Publishing: A Novel, The
End of Victory Culture, and most recently, Mission
Unaccomplished (Nation Books), the first collection of Tomdispatch
interviews. His blog is The
Notion. Michael Schwartz [send
him mail], professor of sociology at Stony Brook University,
has written extensively on popular protest and insurgency. This
report on the battle of Baghdad is adapted from his forthcoming
Tomdispatch book, War
Without End: The Iraq Debacle in Context (Haymarket Books,
June 2008). His work on Iraq has appeared on numerous Internet sites,
including Tomdispatch, Asia Times, Mother Jones, and ZNET.
Copyright
© 2008 Michael Schwartz
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Engelhardt Archives
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