Günther Specht

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Günther Specht (13 November 1914 – 1 January 1945) was a German Luftwaffe fighter ace during World War II.

Having joined the Luftwaffe in 1935 and completed his pilot training, at the start of the war Specht was a Leutnant in 3./ZG 26 "Horst Wessel" (the 3rd squadron of the 26th Heavy Fighter Wing). In 1939 he was wounded by an RAF tail gunner and blinded in one eye. After his recovery he chose to return to active service but was shot down again in France and was seriously injured. These injuries kept him grounded for the next two years. In 1942 he returned to active duty with 1st Fighter Wing (Jagdgeschwader 1 Oesau; JG 1). He was then made Group Commander (Gruppenkommandeur) of II Group of JG 11 (II./JG 11) and promoted to Major. He was appointed as Wing Commander (Geschwaderkommodore) of JG 11 and was listed as missing in action during the attack on the Allied bases at Asch and Ophoven as part of Operation Bodenplatte. He was posthumously promoted to lieutenant colonel (Template:Langx) and was recommended for the Oak Leaves (Template:Langx) to the Knight's Cross, which was never actioned amongst all the confusion in the last months of the war.

Specht was considered one of the best fighter leaders during the war and was a recipient of the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross. During his combat career he was credited with 34 enemy aircraft destroyed, all downed on the Western Front. He was shot down six times during the war.

Personality

Specht was born on 13 November 1914 in Frankenstein (modern Ząbkowice Śląskie) of Prussia (modern Poland). Specht was short in stature but full of energy. He had a distinguishing patch of gray in his hair just above his forehead. He was a perfectionist with a high sense of duty, and expected his men to follow his high standards. Although he lost his left eye in late 1939, according to Squadron Leader (Template:Langx) Heinz Knoke of 5./JG 11, he could see like a vulture and was an excellent marksman.Template:Sfn Specht also had an eye for detail, and he wrote detailed mission log reports for future use.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn[1]

Specht's personal emblems adorning his aircraft included a design by Specht of a pencil superimposed on a chevron (termed a winged pencil) as a wry comment on being deskbound following his injuries.Template:Sfn His single-engine aircraft with JG 11 sported a green spinner and a Knight's Cross painted on the cowling after he was awarded the honour in April 1944.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Specht would not allow women on the group base, considering them an unnecessary diversion. According to Knoke, one time Specht's wife came to visit him on the II./JG 11 base but was held at the guard room on Specht's orders and refused to receive calls from the guard. Instead he asked Knoke to pass a message to her to 'put herself on ice', saying that he would have time for her only after the war. Specht however did not survive, dying five months before the war in Europe came to an end.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Formation leadership

After taking command of II./JG 11, Specht led the group on every mission in which it participated. Following each mission, he wrote detailed and analytical mission reports. He soon gained a reputation as one of the most reliable formation leaders, with II./JG 11 reputed to be one of the best units among the fighter force (Template:Langx) on Reich air defense (Template:Langx).Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

On 17 August 1943 Specht led the group from Gilze en Rijen on an intercept and sighted the B-17 Flying Fortresses of 381 Bombing Group near Antwerp. He waited for 30 minutes until the escorts turned back at Eupen before attacking. Within the next half hour, sixty percent of the bombers went down. Specht himself was credited with downing two as his 16th and 17th victories.Template:Sfn

On 11 September 1944 Specht and the JG 11 Headquarters-flight (Template:Langx) led a combined formation of II. Gruppe Jagdgeschwader 4 (Sturm) (Template:Langx) and III./JG 4. Due to Specht's skills, they positioned themselves against thirty-four B-17s of the "Bloody 100th" and fifteen B-17s were downed before the escorting P-51s arrived. Specht was credited with one P-51.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Military career

twin engine aircraft with a shark's mouth painted on the nose
A Bf 110 similar to one flown by Specht. Notice the shark's mouth painted on the nose

Having joined the Luftwaffe in 1935 and completed his pilot training, when war started in September 1939 Specht was a Leutnant in 3./ZG 26 "Horst Wessel" (the 3rd squadron of the 26th Heavy Fighter Wing). Supposedly equipped with the new, twin-engine, Messerschmitt Bf 110 heavy fighter, its production was so far behind schedule that 7 of the 10 Zerstörergruppen (including Specht's I./ZG 26) had to be equipped with old Messerschmitt Bf 109C and D single-engined fighters. They thus took no role in the Polish campaign, instead based on the North Sea coast near Wilhelmshaven.

This was virtually the only part of the Western Front, during the Phoney War, where there was significant aerial activity in the early months of the war, as RAF bombers flew unescorted raids on the German naval bases. So it did not take long for Specht to score his first victories: two Handley Page Hampden medium bombers in a squadron conducting an armed reconnaissance operation near Heligoland, shot down on 29 September.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Needing a long-range fighter to better intercept the British bombers at distance, I./ZG 26 was thus the next Gruppe selected for re-equipping onto the Bf 110.

On 3 December 1939, 24 RAF Vickers Wellington bombers from Marham and Mildenhall bases attacked Heligoland. These were intercepted by I./ZG 26 along with other Messerschmitt Bf 109 units. Specht scored his third victory, shooting down a bomber over the North Sea. But he was also hit by return fire from the Wellington's tail gunner, seriously wounding him in the face. Ditching into the sea, he was picked up by rescue craft. Losing the sight in his left eye, he spent the next six months in recovery.Template:Sfn He was shot down by Corporal Copley of No. 38 Squadron RAF.Template:Sfn

However, he returned to active service, as Gruppe Adjutant of I./ZG 26. Still able to fly combat missions, his aircraft sported a pencil under his Adjutant's chevron – bemoaning the combat pilot's universal loathing of paperwork!Template:Sfn During the French campaign, on 23 May 1940, Spitfires were encountered by Bf 110s and Bf 109s for the first time. The engagement resulted in the loss of two Bf 110s and two Bf 109s. However, Specht would claim three RAF Supermarine Spitfire fighters shot down. The British No. 92 Squadron RAF involved lost three Spitfires in the entire engagement. Squadron Leader Roger J Bushell became a prisoner of war while Paul H. Klipsch and Patrick Alexander George Learmond were killed in action.[2] During the course of this battle, Specht and his rear gunner/radio operator were wounded, force land near Calais and Boulogne-sur-Mer with a damaged aircraft.[1]Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Again he was badly injured and spent further time in hospital.

After recovering he took up staff duties for a year, until 16 September 1941, when he was made Staffelkapitän (Squadron leader) of a newly formed night-fighter training unit, 2./Nachtjagdschule 1 (coming out of 2./Zerstörerschule 1). Soon after, on 31 October, Hauptmann (Captain) Specht was promoted to Kommandeur of III./NJS 1. Located at Ingolstadt-Manching, Specht instructed pilots in conversion to night fighting. Paul Zorner, a future night fighter expert, was one of his students. Leading the Gruppe for exactly one year, this was the last time Specht flew a twin engine aircraft, whereupon he returned to combat duties.Template:Sfn

single engine aircraft parked in a field
A Bf 109 Gustav similar to one used by Specht

Initially reassigned to 10./JG 1 based in the Ruhr, he shot down his first Viermot (four-engined bomber), a Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress on a mission to Wilhelmshaven, his 7th aerial victory, on 26 February 1943.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn This was the beginning of a new war for Specht – the 8th USAAF was starting its bombing offensive on the Reich's industrial complex. Soon afterward, on 27 March, he was appointed Staffelkapitän of the newly reformed 7./JG 1,Template:Sfn then in May 1943 he was promoted to Gruppenkommandeur of II./JG 11, succeeding Major Adolf Dickfeld who was transferred.Template:Sfn Command of his former 7. Staffel then went to Oberleutnant Heinrich Klöpper.Template:Sfn Jagdgeschwader 11 was a new fighter wing, created in April 1943 by dividing Jagdgeschwader 1 (flying Fw 190s) in half and filling it out into a full wing with new Gruppen flying Bf 109G-6 'gunboats', to increase the homeland protection.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn He was based back near his original airfields on the North Sea coast, his unit the first line of defense against the bomber streams and their fighter escorts.

Throughout 1943, as the Luftwaffe took the fight to the bombers flying unescorted over the Reich, Specht scored regularly. Leading by example, he soon became one of the top Viermot aces shooting down 14 bombers out of his 18 victories that year.[1]Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn This included his 13th victory on 26 July, during Blitz Week, when bombers targeted the Blohm & Voss U Boat yards in Hamburg and the synthetic rubber factories of Continental AG and Nordhafen in Hanover.;Template:Sfn as well a pair on 17 August on the Schweinfurt–Regensburg mission.Template:Sfn He was awarded the Honour Goblet of the Luftwaffe (Script error: No such module "Lang".) on 23 August, and the German Cross in Gold (Script error: No such module "Lang".) on 25 November. Specht became increasingly critical of the relatively weak armament of the Bf 109 during this time. Towards the end of 1943, with longer-ranged fighter-escorts accompanying the Allied bombers, tactics had to change: The single-engined fighters would engage the fighter screen while a Zerstörergruppe would take on the bombers. Coincidentally, for a while Specht's II./JG 11 was paired up with his old unit, I./ZG 26.Template:Sfn

He continued his success into 1944: On 11 February 1944 II./JG 11 engaged escort fighters returning from a raid on Frankfurt with Specht downing 2nd Lieutenant Richard McDonald of the 354th Fighter Group, who crashed his P-51 Mustang "Plane Jane" near Oberalben.Template:Sfn Nine days later, (the opening of the 8th USAAF's "Big Week") Specht had to crash land on the Ærø Island as a result of technical problems with his Bf 109G. Despite that, he was back in the air the next day claiming a P-47 fighter, and a bomber and a fighter the day after, to take his tally to 30. On 15 March II./JG 11 lost six killed in action, two wounded, and eight aircraft lost, resulting in Specht declaring the unit non-operational for six weeks to rest and replace losses.[1]Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

On 8 April 1944 Specht was awarded the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross (Script error: No such module "Lang".) for his 30 victories on the Western Front.Template:Sfn On 15 April, after his commander Hermann Graf was injured on 29 March, he transferred his command of II./JG 11 to Major Günther Rall, and moved to the Geschwaderstab (Wing Command flight) as Kommodore-in-training, under Herbert Ihlefeld.Template:Sfn Specht was given full command of JG 11 on 15 May, replacing Ihlefeld who was himself transferred to command JG 1.Template:Sfn But little could be done as the Allied bombing offensive stepped up a gear. His units were decimated over the skies of Normandy in June and July. He himself was injured in July, suffering head injuries in yet another crash-landing. Despite severe pain from his injuries, Specht remained on combat duty. His wing was retired to the Rhineland to be rebuilt, but they were crushed again in the latter half of 1944. The Allies were now sending overwhelming numbers of bombers to destroy the German industrial and military factories and the bombers were now protected by the advent of the P-51 Mustang, providing fighter cover right into the heart of the Reich and back.

During Operation Market Garden, the Allied parachute landings in the Netherlands, Specht claimed two RAF Hawker Typhoons west of Arnhem on 26 September.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn According to RAF records only three Typhoons were shot down on 26 September; two to flak and one in aerial combat against Jagdgeschwader 53 Bf 109s near Apeldoorn. No fighters were recorded lost near Deventer.Template:Sfn However, it may be the case that loss records were lost or not well kept, meaning Specht's claims cannot be traced and may well be accurate.Template:Sfn

Operation Bodenplatte

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File:Fw 190 A-8.jpg
An Fw 190 A-8/R2 in American hands. This Fw 190 was captured during Bodenplatte. Specht flew an Fw 190A on this date.

In December, Hitler ordered his final, desperate attack in the west - through the snow-covered forests of the Ardennes. Poor weather kept the promised air support grounded, but early on the morning of New Year's Day, long after it was tactically useful or relevant, the Luftwaffe launched Operation Bodenplatte ('Baseplate') - not against the devastating strategic bombers, but on the frontline fighter airbases.

Virtually all available fighter groups in the west were allocated to this mission, JG 11 was assigned the USAAF airfield at Asch (Code Name Y–29) and the RAF airfield at Ophoven north of Asch. The 366th Fighter Group (366th FG, Ninth Air Force) and the 352nd Fighter Group (352 FG, Eighth Air Force) were based at Asch. No. 41, No. 130, 350 and No. 610 Squadrons of the 2nd Tactical Wing were based at Ophoven.[1][3]Template:Sfn

For this mission Specht wore his full dress uniform with medals instead of his flight suit. JG 11 was based at Darmstadt-Griesheim, Zellhausen, and Gross-Ostheim. I./JG 11, III./JG 11 (Fw 190 A–9), and II./JG 11 (Bf 109 G) mustered sixty-five aircraft for this mission. Specht flew Fw 190 A-9 (Werknummer 205033—factory number) "Black 4".Template:Sfn Overall the operation was a major failure. With the large proportion of inexperienced, green pilots, flight coordination was extremely difficult and due to the extreme secrecy many pilots were shot down by their own FlaK antiaircraft, who were not pre-warned of the operation. It also resulted in the loss of a number of irreplaceable combat leaders.

As regards JG 11 specifically, at 08:08 amTemplate:Refn the aircraft took off and assembled over Aschaffenburg with two Junkers Ju 188 'Pathfinders' to navigate. After assembling, Specht ordered all aircraft to fly at Script error: No such module "convert". to the target area, climbing to Script error: No such module "convert". prior to commencing the attack. Some P-47 Thunderbolts of the 390th Fighter Squadron, 366th FG, were already airborne and Mustangs of the 487th Fighter Squadron, 352nd FG, were on the runway. The formation was disrupted by flak, and several German aircraft were shot down.Template:RefnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn

The P-47 and P-51s took a heavy toll of JG 11; some 25 pilots were lost, including Specht, who was posted as Missing In Action, along with other senior officers of JG 11.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Death and subsequent confusion

There was some confusion over the circumstance of Specht's death. Lt. Melvin Paisley and his wingman Flight Officer Dave Johnson were flying 366th FG P-47s; Johnson shot down two German fighters before his aircraft was heavily damaged from return fire. Bailing out, he landed in a field near Asch. A Bf 109 he had shot down had belly landed close by and Johnson rode a borrowed bicycle over to inspect it. The aircraft was intact but the pilot was dead. Johnson took the pilot's identification card and gun and rode back to base. The identification card identified the pilot as an Oberstleutnant (lieutenant colonel); however, the card actually belonged to Oberleutnant (Template:Langx) August Engel of 8. Staffel.Template:Sfn

Further research has revealed more detail. German records confirmed Specht flew a Fw 190, not a Bf 109, and that he was a Major at the time, confirming Johnson's victim was most likely to have been Engel. Johnson's claim form revealed he had claimed a Bf 109, not an Fw 190. The ID card of Johnson's victim was passed on to a member of the ground crew who spoke German. This individual stated that the rank was given as lieutenant colonel. The incorrect identification was most likely a language error and misunderstanding of German ranks. This may have caused the belief that Johnson had killed Specht. Johnson died in October 1976, and aviation historians were unable to secure his version of events.Template:Sfn

Specht was officially listed as missing in action over Maastricht, but he has recently been confirmed dead. He crashed his plane after taking heavy fire. Specht was promoted posthumously to Oberstleutnant and nominated for the Eichenlaub (Oak Leaves to the Knight's Cross) though this was never awarded in the bedlam of the final weeks of the war. Shot down six times in his career, he preferred to try landing his damaged aircraft rather than taking to his parachute. Specht was credited with 34 aerial victories, which according to Obermaier included 17 heavy bombers, all achieved over the Western Front.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Refn

Summary of career

Aerial victory claims

Mathews and Foreman, authors of Luftwaffe Aces — Biographies and Victory Claims, researched the German Federal Archives and found records for 31 aerial victory claims, including 15 heavy bombers, plus three further unconfirmed claims, all of which claimed on the Western Front.Template:Sfn

Victory claims were logged to a map-reference (PQ = Planquadrat), for example "PQ 05 Ost TN-6". The Luftwaffe grid map (Script error: No such module "Lang".) covered all of Europe, western Russia and North Africa and was composed of rectangles measuring 15 minutes of latitude by 30 minutes of longitude, an area of about Script error: No such module "convert".. These sectors were then subdivided into 36 smaller units to give a location area Script error: No such module "convert". in size.Template:Sfn

Chronicle of aerial victories
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  This and the ? (question mark) indicates information discrepancies listed by Prien, Stemmer, Rodeike, Bock, Mathews and Foreman.
Claim Date Time Type Location Claim Date Time Type Location
– Claims with 3. Staffel of Zerstörergeschwader 26Template:Sfn
"Phoney War" — 1 September – 5 December 1939
1 29 September 1939 10:01 Hampden southeast of HeligolandTemplate:Sfn 3 3 December 1939
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Wellington northwest of HeligolandTemplate:Sfn
2 29 September 1939 10:05 Hampden southeast of HeligolandTemplate:Sfn
– Claims with 3. Staffel of Zerstörergeschwader 26Template:Sfn
Battle of France — 10 May – 5 December 1939
4 23 May 1940
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Spitfire vicinity of Calais 6 23 May 1940
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Spitfire vicinity of Calais
5 23 May 1940
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Spitfire vicinity of Calais
– Claims with 10. Staffel of Jagdgeschwader 1Template:Sfn
German Bight — January – March 1943
7 26 February 1943 12:18 B-17 Script error: No such module "convert". northwest of BorkumTemplate:Sfn
– Claims with II. Gruppe of Jagdgeschwader 11Template:Sfn
Defense of the Reich — 1 April – 31 December 1943
8 14 May 1943 12:10?Template:Refn B-24 east of SchleswigTemplate:Sfn
Eckernförde Bay
17 4 October 1943 10:16 B-24 PQ 05 Ost TN-6Template:Sfn
9 15 May 1943 10:55 B-17 SchönbergTemplate:Sfn
Elbe estuary
18 8 October 1943 16:39 B-24 PQ 05 Ost AR-6, over seaTemplate:Sfn
northwest of Nordholz
10 19 May 1943 13:17 B-17 PQ 05 Ost 85/6/2, south of PellwormTemplate:Sfn 19 9 October 1943 15:30 B-17 PQ 05 Ost ML-8Template:Sfn
11 11 June 1943 18:05 B-17 PQ 05 Ost 7/1/8Template:Sfn 20 13 November 1943 11:20 P-38 PQ 05 Ost FQ-7/3Template:Sfn
Fürstenau
12 25 June 1943 08:52 B-17 PQ 05 Ost AQ-5/6Template:Sfn
off the Frisian Islands
21 26 November 1943 12:20?Template:Refn B-17 PQ 05 Ost ER-2/7Template:Sfn
13 26 July 1943 11:42 B-17 PQ 05 Ost FS-5/4Template:Sfn
north of Wagenfeld
22 29 November 1943 15:30 P-47 PQ 05 Ost S/EQ-5/7Template:Sfn
14 28 July 1943 09:02 B-17 PQ 05 Ost RS-4/7Template:Sfn
south of Darmstadt
23 20 December 1943 11:50 P-51 BremenTemplate:Sfn
15 17 August 1943 15:00 B-17 Script error: No such module "convert". north-northeast of DiestTemplate:Sfn 24?Template:Refn 22 December 1943
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P-47Template:Sfn
16 17 August 1943 15:20 B-17 Script error: No such module "convert". west of HergardenTemplate:Sfn
– Claims with II. Gruppe of Jagdgeschwader 11Template:Sfn
Defense of the Reich — January – June 1944
25?Template:Refn 5 January 1944
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P-38Template:Sfn 28 21 February 1944 13:54 P-47 PQ 05 Ost S/GT/GU, vicinity of LietheTemplate:Sfn
26?[Note 1] 30 January 1944
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P-47Template:Sfn 29 22 February 1944 13:25?Template:Refn P-51 PQ 05 Ost S/HS/HT, vicinity of BlombergTemplate:Sfn
27 11 February 1944 12:15?Template:Refn P-51 PQ 05 Ost S/SP-6, area of W/r-sTemplate:Sfn
vicinity of Worms
30 22 February 1944 13:42?Template:Refn B-17 PQ 05 Ost S/HT, vicinity of DetmoldTemplate:Sfn
– Claims with Stab of Jagdgeschwader 11Template:Sfn
Western Front — September – October 1944
31 11 September 1944
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P-51Template:Sfn 33 26 September 1944 14:06 Typhoon PQ 05 Ost S/HN/GN, vicinity of ArnhemTemplate:Sfn
32 26 September 1944 14:04?Template:Refn Typhoon PQ 05 Ost S/HN/GN, vicinity of ArnhemTemplate:Sfn
– Claims with Stab of Jagdgeschwader 11Template:Sfn
Defense of the Reich — November – December 1944
34 5 December 1944 12:35 P-51 south of Mittelland CanalTemplate:Sfn

Awards

Dates of rank

August 1939: Leutnant[4]
23 May 1940: Oberleutnant[4]
May 1943: Hauptmann[4]
8 April 1944: Major, (or possibly 1 May 1944)[4]
(posthumously) OberstleutnantTemplate:Sfn

See also

Notes

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References

Citations

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  1. a b c d e Obermaier (1986)
  2. Droog, Bart. "RAF - No. 92 Squadron." Traces of World War 2 23 January 2008. Retrieved: 20 September 2010.
  3. a b Gunther Specht on TracesOfWar
  4. a b c d Luftwaffe Officer Career Summaries website.

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Bibliography

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  • Barbas, Bernd (1985). Planes of the Luftwaffe Fighter Aces Vol I. Kookaburra Technical Publishing. Template:ISBN includes a profile of his aircraft, p. 168
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Military Offices held

Military offices
Preceded byTemplate:S-bef/check Group Adjutant of I./ZG 26
May 1940 – 31 October 1941 Template:S-ttl/check
Template:S-aft/check Succeeded by
Preceded byTemplate:S-bef/check Squadron Leader of 2./Nachtjagdschule 1
16 September 1941 – 31 October 1941 Template:S-ttl/check
Unknown
Preceded byTemplate:S-bef/check Group Commander of III./Nachtjagdschule 1
31 October 1941 – 31 October 1942 Template:S-ttl/check
Template:S-aft/check Succeeded by
Preceded byTemplate:S-bef/check Squadron Leader of 7./JG 1
27 March 1943 – May 1943 Template:S-ttl/check
Template:S-aft/check Succeeded by
Preceded byTemplate:S-bef/check Group Commander of II./JG 11
May 1943 – 15 May 1944 Template:S-ttl/check
Template:S-aft/check Succeeded by
Preceded byTemplate:S-bef/check Wing Commander of JG 11
15 May 1944 – 1 January 1945 Template:S-ttl/check
Template:S-aft/check Succeeded by

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