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00:00North Africa, 1942.
00:05Close to 600 tanks of the German Panzer Army, Africa,
00:09charge across the Sahara Desert into Egypt.
00:12And the British send almost 1,200 tanks to stop them.
00:17And then all of a sudden, the ground started to shake.
00:20And that was the barrage that started.
00:23Two legendary commanders, Montgomery and Rommel,
00:26fight for control of North Africa.
00:30There was only one thing left for us to do,
00:33to harm the enemy as much as we could.
00:38The stakes couldn't be higher,
00:40and the fighting is ferocious.
00:43This is El Alamey,
00:45one of history's greatest tank battles.
00:48If there is a place called Hell,
00:50I should imagine it couldn't be any worse than what that was.
00:53It was an inferno,
00:56a scene I haven't forgotten to this day.
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01:29The Shara
01:34Vast stretches of seemingly endless desert, empty and barren.
01:39But just below the surface of this great sea of sand lies the evidence of a tremendous battle.
01:42lies the evidence of a tremendous battle a clash of infantry and armor so
01:47enormous it changed the course of the Second World War
02:00this is what I found today this is a German shrapnel from airplanes and this
02:08is British this is a German bullet because it is made of steel if it was
02:13English it would have been made of copper it's rusty this belonged to an
02:18English or German soldier it belonged to a young man around 17 years old I found
02:24it there it's silver look at the teeth all this area was used by the German
02:33army the English were five kilometers from here the Germans would fire east and
02:42the other side would fire back at them there were armies everywhere
02:54Libya January 1942 for almost a year now this part of the Sahara has been the
03:01battleground a struggle for control of North Africa on one side is the German
03:08Italian tank force the Panzer Army Africa its mission is to seize the Middle East
03:13oil fields giving the Third Reich and endless supply of fuel for its war
03:17machine on the other side is the well-supplied British Eighth Army relying
03:22on sheer numbers and strong defenses to stop the Germans
03:28the British are up against one of the most brilliant commanders of the war
03:32Field Marshal Erwin Rommel the Desert Fox
03:35throughout 1941 he keeps catching them off-guard with lightning-fast surprise attacks
03:44but by November Rommel's tank force is wearing out and the Allies strike back over six
04:00weeks they drive the Panzer Army 800 kilometers west across the Libyan desert
04:05by late January Rommel is down to 228 tanks 139 Panzer threes and fours and 89 Italian tanks infamously known as metal coffins
04:24the British have more than 400 tanks including 160 valentines
04:31and more than 230 medium Crusaders
04:35the Allies appear to have the Panzer Army on the ropes
04:42but Rommel isn't finished yet
04:46as he writes in his memoirs
04:49it was clear to us that the British would try to destroy our army with all the
04:55means at their disposal our southern flank lay wide open and they had a large
04:59choice of possible operations to choose from a constant threat would hang over
05:05our supply lines but the British were not to have the chance of exploiting their
05:09opportunities
05:11I had decided to strike first
05:16the plan is pure Desert Fox
05:21push southeast through the unoccupied desert
05:24then swing north hitting the overextended British flank
05:28spearheading Rommel's attack are formations of the Panzer Mark III Special
05:34it's designed for tank-to-tank combat with 50 millimeters of frontal armor
05:41but it is the mark threes armament that gives it the edge with a 50 millimeter main cannon
05:49able to fire armor-piercing rounds it ranges up to 650 meters
05:55in early 1942 the British 8th Army has nothing that powerful
06:02our long five centimeter guns were out gunning the English ones
06:08they didn't have long barrels at that time yet
06:10their guns had shorter barrels and that meant less penetrating power
06:14they had bigger gun so they could engage us further away
06:27we were definitely on the losing side from the point of your tanks
06:33the Panzer was a better war machine than a Crusader without a dice
06:43the Crusader is the mainstay of British tank forces
06:50it's capable of a top speed of 24 kilometers per hour
06:53making it the fastest tank in the desert
06:56but the speed comes at a cost
07:00the Crusader has just 32 millimeters of armor plating
07:03leaving it vulnerable to anti-tank fire
07:05and its light two-pounder gun is all but useless against the Panzers
07:12I suppose it would have penetrated if you were close enough
07:16but you were too damn close
07:22all that counted was on one side the thickness of the armor
07:24and on the other side the penetrating power of the gun
07:27those two factors were constantly competing against each other
07:30better armor was built and better guns were built
07:40they only had the Cruiser 2, Cruiser 4 and the Crusader
07:44and they were basically extinct
07:48Rommel is betting his 228 Panzers can beat more than 400 British tanks
07:53and on January 21st 1942 he attacks
08:01in the vanguard is gunner Wilhelm Haggios with the 15th Panzer Division
08:08we went uphill for a bit, just a few meters
08:15then we were on the plateau and there was an English tank squad
08:18we opened fire
08:24we destroyed two tanks at a distance of about 1,000 meters
08:33then we suddenly spotted a Crusader approaching our firing line
08:39from the right side
08:40from the right side
08:51we brought it down when it was around 600 meters away
08:54we brought it down when it was around 600 meters away
09:01in the meantime the colonel was yelling over the radio
09:05shoot, shoot, shoot
09:12the Grand had approached our flank from the left side
09:18the colonel was yelling, to the left
09:24I turned the crank like crazy
09:26until finally I had my sights on the tank
09:28it filled my entire visual field
09:30that's how close it was
09:31and I brought it down right away with two shots
09:35and I brought it down right away with two shots
09:39that danger was averted
09:42that danger was averted
09:50we were surprised by these first American Grand tanks
09:57the Grands, which arrived from the US just weeks before
10:04join the Crusaders on the battlefield
10:07as the newest addition to the British arsenal
10:09the Grand was a very good tank
10:12and we first got the Grands just before the Battle of Alameen
10:16and it was a turning point, take it from me
10:17to get those tanks off
10:19it was like somebody giving me a pocket watch, you know
10:21it was a deep thing
10:23the Grands are a major improvement over the fast but vulnerable Crusaders
10:28they have 51 millimeters of frontal armor
10:33providing greater protection for their six-man crews
10:36but its most unique feature is its powerful side-mounted cannon
10:37a weapon that provides the Allies with an effective countermeasure
10:47against flanking attacks by German Panzers
10:54this tank had a 75 millimeter gun in a sponson
10:58that was a disadvantage for us
10:59because when you were flanking them
11:19you were attacked from the left side
11:21and you had to turn the whole tank to fire
11:23and if there were other tanks in front of you
11:42you would show them your board side while turning
11:54it was a big surprise
11:59but even the new Grand tanks aren't enough to stop Rommel
12:03his flanking attack catches the 8th Army by surprise
12:12over the next five months
12:14the Desert Fox pushes farther and farther east
12:17capturing the key Allied port of Tobruk
12:19and winning back all the ground he had lost
12:21by the end of June
12:25the Panzer Army is inside Egypt
12:27and approaching the coastal village of El Alamein
12:30Rommel is now only 300 kilometers from the Suez Canal
12:35victory is within his grasp
12:38but the defensive minded British have a nasty surprise in store for Rommel at El Alamein
12:44here along a 60 kilometer front
12:47they have massed a huge tank force
12:48they are determined to stop the Panzer Army at any cost
12:53the first battle of El Alamein is about to begin
13:07El Alamein, Egypt
13:09a remote desert outpost on Africa's north coast
13:12today little evidence remains of its turbulent past
13:23but it was here at this isolated railway stop
13:26that two of the greatest tank battles of the Second World War took place
13:30the two of the greatest tank battles of the Second World War took place
13:40June 1942
13:42for five months Erwin Rommel and the Panzer Army Africa
13:46have been fighting their way east
13:48intent on overrunning British held Egypt
13:50swinging north and seizing the oil fields of the Middle East
13:52Rommel's advance has reached El Alamein
13:59he is now just 300 kilometers from the Suez Canal
14:03but the fighting has worn down the Panzer Army
14:06we had lost a lot of tanks during the battles in Libya and Egypt
14:12our group only had 20 tanks we should have had 220
14:23by the time they reach El Alamein
14:28Rommel has little to throw into the fight
14:312,000 infantry
14:33a few dozen artillery and anti-tank guns
14:36and only 55 serviceable Panzers
14:40any other commander would dig in or retreat
14:43but not Rommel
14:45on July 1, 1942
14:47he continues his attack
14:49the main thing I had wanted to avoid
14:51was the war settling down at El Alamein
14:54into mechanized static warfare
14:56with a stabilized front
14:58we planned to get through the Alamein line
15:00and overrun it before the retreating remnants of the 8th Army
15:02a time to organize its defense
15:05the fighting goes on for 26 days
15:10but Rommel can't break the British defenses
15:13the first battle of El Alamein ends in a stalemate
15:22the battle has been costly for Rommel
15:26his Panzer Army desperately needs men, armor and supplies
15:30the German army in El Alamein was on the ropes
15:38the biggest problem in the desert was a lack of water
15:45you were always lacking water
15:47it was even worse in El Alamein
15:51it was now 1,500 kilometers to the standpipe
15:55and every drop had to be transported by road
15:59Rommel's rapid advance across North Africa
16:04has left him a long and vulnerable supply line
16:07reinforcements, fuel, ammunition, food and water
16:13must be trucked 2,000 kilometers to the front
16:15using the roads was a dangerous way to transport the water
16:26and a lot of it was lost on the way
16:28the English constantly attacked our water trucks
16:35by late July the Germans are losing 80% of their supplies to Allied air attack
16:39in August the 8th Army receives a half million tons of supplies
16:47including 368 new tanks
16:50and a new commander, Lieutenant General Bernard Montgomery
16:55Rommel's time is running out
16:58he can't keep pace with the Allies rapid resupply
17:00on August 30th he risks one last attack
17:04hoping to catch the British off guard
17:06and force them to retreat
17:11it's a nightmare from the start
17:17256 German tanks advance towards tanks of the British 7th Armored Division
17:22and get bogged down in a minefield
17:26Rommel trying once again to outflank the British
17:28orders his panzers to swing northeast
17:31and attack the Alam Halfa Ridge
17:33Leading the attack are 27 of the Germans' new Panzer Mark IV Specials
17:40Equipped with a high velocity 75mm gun
17:46the Panzer IV Aus F2 is the most powerful tank on the battlefield
17:50the Mark IV is well protected with 50mm of frontal armor
17:54but its heavy armor comes at a price
17:58each tank weighs 23 tons
18:01and burns 470 liters of fuel per day
18:04fuel that has to be trucked across long and vulnerable supply lines
18:08Rommel is betting that his superior panzers and mobile tactics
18:13can quickly take the ridge before his fuel runs out
18:16but Montgomery is ready for him with 400 tanks and 200 anti-tank guns
18:31the key to the whole Alamein position was Alam Halfa Ridge
18:33I would not allow our tanks to rush out
18:36I would not allow our tanks to rush out
18:38we would hold the Alam Halfa ridges securely
18:41and let him beat up against them
18:43the first evening when we got there we had a shotgun battle with some English tanks
18:56it would have been better if the entire attack had been cancelled
19:04it would have been better if the entire attack had been cancelled
19:07and we got bombarded by artillery and low-flying planes for three days
19:23you could hear the bombs approaching one after the next
19:41but nothing happened to us
19:46no supply vehicles got through to us
19:58we only had a few scraps left to eat
20:01it was like that for three days
20:07by September 2nd Rommel has seen enough
20:12after losing 50 of his irreplaceable panzers he orders a withdrawal
20:17he no longer has the resources to mount mobile attacks
20:21the Desert Fox orders his men to dig in
20:25in El Alamein
20:27in El Alamein the war in North Africa
20:30had changed from mobile warfare into a kind of static warfare
20:34Stellungskrieg
20:35the entire front was moving up and the new front line was now between the mosque in El Alamein
20:47and the Katara depression
20:49it was a 60 kilometer front
20:53the German line at El Alamein is ideally situated for defense
20:57to the north lays the Mediterranean Sea protecting the Germans left flank
21:01to the south protecting their right the Katara depression
21:0526,000 square kilometers of deep soft sand impassable to heavy armor
21:14Rommel's panzer army prepares defensive positions
21:21including powerful tank busting minefields planted across the entire front
21:25these so-called devils gardens were minefields that had been created by Rommel
21:36we used every explosive we had in these minefields
21:42these devils gardens were very very dangerous
21:48this area is called El Mitteria this whole area was mined from the railway station and the sea to the depression
22:0370 kilometers all mined
22:06so many people lost their lives in the war seven or eight of my relatives were killed
22:10my brother was killed by a mine he never got a funeral
22:14in 1946 the war was killed by a mine
22:17he never got a funeral
22:18in 1946 they withdrew and left behind the mines but they were surrounded in barbed wire
22:31they were marked with the sign of death the skull and crossbones
22:35but the signs were removed but the signs were removed the mines are still here and there will never be an end to that
22:55Rommel's battered and exhausted troops complete their defensive line at El Alamein
23:10while across no man's land Montgomery's forces grow stronger and stronger
23:16he has assembled 10 infantry divisions and more than 1,000 tanks
23:20all well stocked with food, water, ammunition and fuel
23:25Montgomery is ready for a final showdown with the Germans
23:29and on the evening of October 23rd he unleashes a massive artillery barrage
23:37the guns blasted away and nobody realised the noise that there was there
23:41it was just like daylight with just one wall of flame
23:44if there is a place called hell I should imagine it couldn't be any worse than what that was
23:52the second battle of El Alamein
23:56one of the largest armoured battles of the second world war has begun
23:59October 23rd 1942 Allied Commander Bernard Montgomery attacks Field Marshal Erwin Rommel's Panzer Army Africa
24:15and it begins with a massive artillery barrage
24:18just like daylight with just one wall of flame
24:26the noise was horrific and the message of death going through there it really was
24:31Montgomery follows up with 700 tanks in a three-pronged armoured attack
24:46two in the centre and south are diversions intended to pin down the bulk of the Panzer Army
24:52but Montgomery's main force will attack German lines in the north
24:56aiming to occupy the coast road and the strategically important Kidney Ridge
25:07we had no trouble that night going through it all
25:09we pulled into Kidney Ridge and we finished up there in the dark
25:15when daylight broke we were amazed
25:19there was a mass of vehicles parked into this small ridge
25:21I thought oh god all it was a half a dozen planes were some bombs in it
25:26there would be absolute chaos and behind us were the minefield
25:39they had five or six times the number of tanks that we did
25:42we were always the underdogs in terms of numbers
25:52the English started their tax with 300 400 500 tanks while we had only about 50
26:01that was the ratio at the time
26:03the German defensive line on Kidney Ridge is thin
26:09one regiment of 600 infantry
26:1218 anti-tank guns
26:14and 47 Panzers
26:18the British attack them in force
26:23fielding 150 tanks of the 2nd Armoured Brigade
26:29when the order came through it we went up on the ridge and did a bit of shooting
26:39I'm searching for a target
26:42that's much my job
26:44he kind of carries out my orders
26:46there's so much dust flying about
26:49that is really chaos
26:51dust obscures the vehicle which has created it
26:53it could be a truck, it could be a tank
26:55I'll say a target
26:57there Travis left
26:58Travis left Travis left
26:59Travis left on
27:00tank
27:01Mach 4
27:02and fire it well
27:06you fire that tank
27:08and if that one blew it up
27:11it switched to another one
27:17I was wounded right on the first day
27:19we got hit immediately in the early morning
27:21a shell penetrated our armour and exploded inside our tank
27:31this is a splinter from a tank shell from an English gun
27:36these splinters were flying around inside our tank
27:43the only thing you know in that moment is I need to get out fast
27:48I managed to open the hatch right away and fell out more or less
27:55well I lifted myself with my arms because my legs were already broken
27:59open the hatch, pull yourself out and then drop yourself down
28:05it was two metres to the ground
28:07you knew it was going to hurt but you had no other choice
28:10the heavily outnumbered Germans have one big advantage over the British
28:21the 88mm flak gun
28:24the most feared piece of artillery of the Second World War
28:28the 88, a modified anti-aircraft gun
28:32accurately fires high velocity anti-tank rounds
28:34that can penetrate the heaviest armour even at distances of more than 2,000 metres
28:49when they used the 88mm aircraft gun as an anti-tank gun
28:52then of course we were definitely on the losing side
28:55there was another regiment on our right
29:02which was one of the two regiments that had come from Palestine
29:04never been in action before
29:06you go into action and try and keep the hull down
29:09and just get up high enough to be able to use your gun
29:12and they were sitting out there on top of the ridge
29:15an 88mm fired sick rounds and grew up five tanks
29:28three and a half thousand feet a second
29:31you could see the shells screaming across the ground
29:33they were there before in a flash, you know
29:47all of a sudden something attracts you
29:51there's a tank burning just next to you
29:54and you're relieved
29:56it sounds a horrible thing to say
29:58somebody just died in that tank probably
30:00but you're relieved
30:01because you know from your gunnery experience
30:07that half a degree on that site
30:10and it was you
30:16and that's something that is difficult to live with actually
30:18the feeling I mean
30:19difficult to live with
30:20and that's what I mean
30:21and that's what I mean
30:23and that's what I mean
30:25by the end of the first day of battle
30:30Montgomery's tank forces have made only modest gains
30:33at a cost of 1600 casualties
30:36and 120 tanks
30:38but kidney ridge remains in German hands
30:42Montgomery now prepares for an even larger attack
30:46one he hopes will break Rommel's stubborn Panzer Army Africa for good
31:01October 23rd 1942
31:05Allied Commander Bernard Montgomery launches a three pronged armoured attack
31:08in an attempt to crack German defenses at LLMA
31:14Rommel's men are too well dug in
31:18the attack failed
31:20even though Montgomery's forces outnumber Rommel's two to one
31:24the central advance has stalled near Ruizat Ridge
31:29and hundreds of British tanks are trapped in German minefields
31:35the next day we sat around
31:39and we were shelled fairly frequently
31:46it was artillery shelling mainly
31:49so we were all right in the tanks
31:51four lanes were going to be cleared
31:59and we would then go through
32:02but of course it didn't go completely to plan
32:09the poor settlers were being machine gun killed
32:13eventually we got the old clearance to go
32:15we got through
32:20we got through
32:22we got what we thought out of the minefield
32:24the tapes had vanished
32:26and when the tapes vanished
32:27they're supposed to be free
32:31this is the whole battalion you know
32:33this is 57 tanks
32:35following in line and opening out
32:37we went down into the body
32:39came along and went up onto the other side
32:42we got onto the ridge
32:43as soon as we got up the other side
32:45we couldn't get over the top
32:46because he was firing straight up
32:48you could see his shell, the AP shell coming along towards you
32:50across the desert in the daylight
33:05you could see the shot coming at you
33:08that was a tremendous gun, the idiot
33:11that the German had
33:20we then started taking on the anti-tank guns
33:22firing the AG
33:28firing all our A's
33:30and machine gunning
33:32and then of course the tank battles started
33:38we lost three or four tanks before you could say Jack Robinson
33:47you know got blown up you know
33:49you're just there, you're weighing it all up
33:53you know, then again the next thing
33:56up went my tank
33:58and we stuck one of our own mines and went sky high
34:02they all bailed out, the two on the bottom were pretty well knocked up
34:11I was alright, I was in the turret
34:14the commander was alright, he got out
34:18I jumped out, pretty smartish
34:21and when I landed down here's a tiller mine between me feet
34:24I jumped out in there
34:27I thought to myself, well how lucky can you get
34:32what's going on?
34:34lovely moonlight like that
34:36what happened?
34:38getting the lamp light they came across
34:40dropping all these flares
34:42and he saw all these tanks all nicely in the straight line
34:44and he started dropping bombs
35:02Despite the fierce armoured assault
35:04the panzer army continues to hold the line
35:08Rommel expects Montgomery's next attack to come in the north
35:11and he redeploys all of his remaining forces
35:17among them is 20 year old Rudolf Schneider
35:20from Rommel's own combat group
35:24On the night of October 25th
35:30we took position in an area that was very flat
35:34in the east you could see the rising sun
35:38in the east you could see the rising sun
35:41the sun blinds you
35:44and the noise, the rumbling
35:48was our only indication of the enormous number of vehicles and tanks
35:53that were approaching us
35:54approaching us
36:03and we saw 400 or 500 British tanks approaching the German lines from the east
36:08we had strict orders not to fire until the British armour was as close as 800 to 1200 meters from our lines
36:14before that there was absolute silence
36:15the hundreds of approaching tanks include the allies' newest weapon
36:17a tank so fast and powerful that it would so much be able to attack us
36:18these were one
36:23around the world gripping through the harshania
36:25all and of the African power Biden
36:28and they were among them
36:30we had strict orders not to fire until the British armour was as close as 800 to 1200 metres from our lines
36:32before that there was absolute silence
36:37The hundreds of approaching tanks include the Allies' newest weapon,
36:42a tank so fast and powerful that it would soon become the best-known piece of mobile armor of the Second World War.
36:53October 25, 1942.
36:56The Allied offensive at El Alamein enters its third bloody day,
37:00and the cost on both sides has been enormous.
37:03But despite his mounting losses, Montgomery continues to order wave after wave of massive armored assaults directly into the third German line.
37:17We saw 400 or 500 British tanks approaching the German lines from the east.
37:23Sherman tanks were approaching us.
37:32At the time, we didn't know that these were Shermans.
37:35It's a landmark moment in the history of warfare, the first battlefield appearance of the M4 Sherman tank.
37:48Outfitted with 51 millimeters of frontal armor, the Sherman weighs an incredible 30 tons.
37:56But the most crucial feature of this new tank is its powerful 75-millimeter cannon,
38:01capable of firing high-velocity armor-piercing rounds at ranges up to 800 meters.
38:07The Sherman is now the most powerful tank on the El Alamein battlefield.
38:11We waited until they were visible to our naked ice.
38:27The anti-tank guns also had to wait until they were within 800 meters of the German front line.
38:36And then the inferno erupted.
38:39Terrible noise.
38:53Enormous explosions.
38:58Terrible screaming.
39:04We were just trying to defend ourselves, to survive.
39:25And the tanks were still approaching our lines.
39:28We were just trying to defend ourselves, to survive.
39:34When the drivers figured out they were close to our trench, they would simply use their treads.
39:49He would stop his right treads, which would rotate his tank to bury our soldiers in dirt.
39:58The soldiers in the trench were buried alive or decapitated.
40:19Afterward, you were just glad to have survived.
40:24Afterwards, you are just glad to have survived.
40:28By the late afternoon, there were around 300 to 450 destroyed British vehicles in the lowlands.
40:46They were burning.
40:47They were burning.
40:48Wounded men were all around.
40:51It was an inferno.
40:53A scene forgotten to this day.
40:57Rommel's exhausted panzer army holds the line for the next five days.
40:58But by the first of November, the Germans are down from 500 tanks to just 35.
40:59Rommel's exhausted.
41:00Rommel's exhausted panzer army holds the line for the next five days.
41:06But by the first of November, the Germans are down from 500 tanks to just 35.
41:13Rommel's exhausted panzer army holds the line for the next five days.
41:19But by the first of November, the Germans are down from 500 tanks to just 35.
41:25Montgomery finally has the panzer army on the ropes.
41:32He now launches Operation Supercharge, another all-out attack meant to break Rommel's line once
41:40and for all.
41:42I knew that we couldn't win any more and there was nothing left for us to do.
41:53On the morning of the 5th, we only had eight tanks left and we weren't going to get any more.
42:02We knew that this was the end of the Africa campaign.
42:07But nobody would talk about it. Not a word.
42:15In terms of equipment, this was inevitably the end of the German army.
42:21The fighting goes on for two more days until Rommel, with only 12 panzers remaining,
42:26finally orders a retreat, ending the Second Battle of El Alamein.
42:33It's the first major Allied victory of the Second World War,
42:38and comes at a steep price on both sides.
42:41Of Rommel's forces, 5,000 are killed, 8,000 wounded, and 35,000 captured.
43:03Montgomery's losses include 2,300 killed and over 2,200 missing, 8,500 are wounded,
43:21and 500 of his tanks are destroyed.
43:24I've seen life just so cheap, just flip, you know, flip away, you know, and you get hardened to it.
43:43You learned after a while that you didn't get too close to anybody. That was it.
43:52That was it. You just had to live. You had to carry on. You were a survivor and that was it.
43:58One Christmas in the desert, up comes the Padre. We've been killing people all day.
44:07Come on lads, let's sing a few cards. Peace on earth, good will the man.
44:10I'm afraid. I'm sorry Padre, not for me. And my religion was knocked out of me.
44:19I'm sorry Padre. But I'm sorry out of me. I didn't too close to anybody.
44:29You said I'm sorry, if I could. I'm sorry. I was there, I thought I killed them.
44:36I'm sorry. I was a little parent. I said I was on my son.
44:40I said I had to be here. I said I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I had to be here.
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