China's 2026 diplomatic reversal on Iran, ending its 47-year partnership that provided discounted oil, satellite intelligence, encrypted communications, and financial routing, represents a permanent structural realignment driven by strategic arithmetic: China imports 11.6 million barrels daily, with Iran supplying only 13.8% while Gulf states provide 40% through the Strait of Hormuz, meaning Hormuz closure threatens 53.8% of China's energy supply versus 13.8% from Iran; combined with Belt and Road financial exposure requiring IMF intervention, China's energy security interests now outweigh its strategic partnership with Tehran, permanently restructuring the Strait of Hormuz's strategic architecture.
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China Just FLIPPED On Iran — Why The Strait Of Hormuz Will Never Be The Same本站添加:
Today, is May 23rd, 2026, and the most consequential diplomatic reversal of the 21st century just completed its final phase. Not with a declaration, not with a press conference, not with a formal treaty termination or public denunciation of the 47-year Islamic Republic that China spent decades cultivating as its most reliable Middle Eastern energy partner and strategic counterweight to American power in the Persian Gulf. It completed itself in the language that Beijing uses for its most important communications. The language of what it stopped doing rather than what it announced. China stopped sharing Beidou satellite reconnaissance data with the IRGC's targeting architecture.
China stopped maintaining the Huawei-built encrypted communication infrastructure that the Islamic Republic had been using to route its most sensitive military and financial communications through channels the American intelligence community could not fully penetrate. China stopped providing the financial transaction routing through Chinese banking intermediaries that allowed the IRGC's offshore asset network to continue operating after the UAE's reversal from permissive to proactive on Iranian shell company freezing. And China's President Xi Jinping, at the Beijing summit that produced the most significant geopolitical realignment of the current era, looked at the American president across the table and publicly committed to the precise set of outcomes that Iran's 47-year survival strategy had always counted on China being unwilling to accept. The Strait of Hormuz must remain open, no military equipment to Iran, 600,000 barrels per day of American crude purchased by China as part of a comprehensive energy security framework. And if China could help Iran, it would, but it cannot. That sentence, delivered by Xi directly, is the diplomatic formulation that the Islamic Republic's strategic planners had spent decades designing their entire deterrence architecture around never hearing from Beijing. They heard it, and the Strait of Hormuz will never be the same. But let's back all the way up, because to understand why China's flip on Iran is not a tactical adjustment or temporary diplomatic accommodation of American pressure, but a permanent structural realignment whose consequences for the Strait of Hormuz's strategic future extend decades beyond the current conflict. You need to understand in what the China-Iran relationship actually was, what China was actually providing that went far beyond the discounted oil purchases that most coverage has focused on, and why the specific calculation that produced the flip is not the product of American diplomatic pressure alone, but of a strategic arithmetic that China has been running for years, and that the current conflict finally resolved in the direction that the numbers always pointed.
Here is the complete picture of what the China-Iran comprehensive strategic partnership actually consisted of before it was walked back at the Beijing summit.
In March 2021, China and Iran signed a 25-year comprehensive cooperation agreement whose publicly announced framework involved approximately $400 billion of Chinese investment in Iranian infrastructure, ports, railways, telecommunications, energy facilities, in exchange for a guaranteed supply of discounted Iranian crude oil at preferential pricing that compensated China for the sanctions risk premium of purchasing from a sanctioned supplier.
That was the publicly announced framework. The operational content of the partnership extended considerably further into domains that neither government acknowledged publicly.
The Huawei communication infrastructure installed throughout Iran's major cities and government facilities was not simply commercial telecommunications equipment.
It was the backbone of the encrypted communication architecture that the IRGC used to route its most sensitive command and control communications through channels whose encryption standards and routing protocols were Chinese designed rather than Iranian designed or American penetrable.
The Chinese Beidou satellite constellation, China's answer to the American GPS system, with its 35-satellite network providing global navigation and reconnaissance data, was providing the IRGC's targeting architecture with satellite imagery and positional data of a resolution and update frequency that the IRGC's own satellite capability cannot achieve.
When the IRGC launched cruise missiles at the Fujairah terminal on May 4th, the targeting data that allowed those missiles to navigate to a specific infrastructure facility on the UAE's eastern coast came from somewhere.
Beidou was part of that somewhere. When the IRGC's fast attack boats transited the Strait in formations, the real-time awareness of American naval positions that informed their operational risk assessments came from somewhere.
The Chinese satellite constellation's data sharing arrangement with the IRGC's intelligence architecture was part of that somewhere. And the financial dimension extended beyond the oil trade into the specific mechanism that allowed the IRGC's offshore financial network, the asset structures that Secretary Besant described as having been built over four decades of stealing from the Iranian people, to continue operating after American and UAE financial pressure began systematically targeting it.
Chinese banking intermediaries, specifically state-adjacent financial institutions in Hong Kong, Macau, and Shanghai with established correspondent banking relationships in jurisdictions outside the most aggressive American sanctions enforcement reach, were the routing infrastructure through which IRGC-connected entities moved money that could not be moved through the more directly monitored UAE channels that the UAE's post-Fujairah reversal had closed.
That is what the China-Iran partnership was at its operational core. Satellite intelligence, encrypted communication infrastructure, financial transaction routing, and the diplomatic cover at the United Nations Security Council that prevented the kind of multilateral international pressure that would have required China's affirmative vote to produce. All of that has now been walked back.
Now, let me give you the specific calculation that produced the flip because it did not emerge from the Beijing summit as a surprise outcome of American diplomatic pressure. It emerged from a strategic arithmetic that China's leadership has been running for years and that the current conflict finally forced to its resolution.
China imports 11.6 million barrels of crude oil per day. This is the foundational energy security number for the world's second largest economy and the world's largest manufacturing base.
Of those 11.6 million barrels, Iran supplies approximately 1.6 million per day at the discounted prices the comprehensive cooperation agreement was designed to lock in. Read that as a percentage.
Iran supplies approximately 13.8% of China's daily oil imports. The Gulf states, the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Iraq, and Qatar combined supply approximately 40% of China's daily oil imports through shipments that transit the Strait of Hormuz. Now, run the strategic arithmetic that Xi was running at the Beijing summit.
If the Strait of Hormuz remains closed or contested, China loses access not to 13.8% of its daily oil supply. It loses access to the transit route for 53.8% of its daily oil supply.
The Iranian oil that China receives at a discount cannot replace the Gulf state oil that Hormuz's closure threatens because the quantities are not comparable and because the Iranian supply is constrained by the blockade's enforcement regardless of any Chinese willingness to continue purchasing it.
China's energy security interest in an open Hormuz is not an American diplomatic talking point. It is the arithmetic of 53.8% versus 13.8% and any Chinese leader who would sacrifice the former to protect the latter has made a calculation that cannot survive contact with an accountant, let alone a strategic planner.
Then, there is the Belt and Road dimension that the coverage of China's flip has almost entirely overlooked because it requires understanding the current state of China's domestic financial position rather than the aspirational investment framework that the Belt and Road initiative represented when it was announced.
China is currently approaching the International Monetary Fund to bail out the Chinese banks that issued loans under the Belt and Road initiative in countries whose economies have deteriorated to the point where those loans are failing at scale. The Chinese banking system's exposure to Belt and Road loan defaults has reached the level where the state-adjacent financial institutions that underwrote those loans are requiring sovereign support that China's own fiscal position is struggling to provide without external assistance. A Chinese government whose banking system is approaching the IMF for Belt and Road loan relief is not a Chinese government with the financial surplus capacity to absorb the costs of continued Iranian partnership in the face of American secondary sanctions pressure.
The secondary sanctions that the United States Treasury has been deploying as part of Operation Economic Fury specifically target the financial institutions that facilitate Iranian sanctions evasion. The Chinese bank with a Belt and Road loan portfolio already requiring IMF intervention cannot simultaneously absorb American secondary sanctions without the resulting combined financial pressure threatening its institutional stability in ways that the Chinese government's own financial rescue capacity cannot address.
The Belt and Road's failure is one of the most underreported financial stories of the current era and it is one of the most important structural factors producing China's flip on Iran. Now, let me give you the Beijing summit outcomes in the precise detail they require because the public commitments Xi made in the Great Hall of the People represent a set of red lines that China has now co-signed with its own institutional credibility in ways that make reverting to the previous level of Iranian support operationally and diplomatically impossible.
Xi committed publicly that China would not supply military equipment to Iran.
He committed that the Strait of Hormuz should remain open for normal passage.
He committed to purchasing 600,000 barrels per day of American crude oil as part of the energy security framework that Trump characterized as China being very happy that the Strait is being permanently opened and him doing it for China also in the world.
And he said in the specific diplomatic formulation that his foreign ministry translated into every language relevant to the parties present that if he could help Iran, he would.
But he cannot. That last sentence is the most diplomatically precise of the four commitments because it simultaneously closes the door on Chinese military and intelligence support for Iran while preserving the face-saving framing that China's limitation is capacity rather than choice.
Xi is not telling Iran that China has decided to abandon it. She is telling Iran that China's hands are tied by circumstances beyond its control. The substance is identical. China is not helping Iran.
But the framing allows the 47-year relationship to be walked back without the public humiliation of an explicit abandonment declaration that would damage China's credibility with every other country that has relied on Chinese partnership as a strategic backstop against American pressure.
This is how Beijing walks back commitments that have become strategically inconvenient, not with declarations, with the language of incapacity.
And the IRGC's leadership understands exactly what that language means in operational terms, even if the public framing preserves the diplomatic fiction.
Now, let me give you what the removal of Chinese intelligence support means specifically for the IRGC's operational capability in the Strait of Hormuz because this is the dimension that has received the least public analytical attention and that represents the most consequential practical impact of the flip on the IRGC's remaining military posture. The Beidou satellite constellation's intelligence contribution to the IRGC's targeting architecture was not simply a convenience.
It was the component of the IRGC's situational awareness that compensated for the destruction of its organic intelligence collection infrastructure during Operation Epic Fury.
The IRGC's coastal radar network, its shipborne sensors, its shore-based surveillance systems, these were primary targeting priorities in the opening days of Epic Fury specifically because degrading the IRGC's situational awareness of American naval movements was the precondition for every subsequent phase of the campaign. When you destroy the radar that tells the IRGC where the American destroyers are, you degrade its ability to coordinate the fast attack boat formations that require precise knowledge of the American force positions to avoid the immediate engagements that produced the six fast boats in 10 minutes destruction events that May 4th demonstrated. The Chinese Beidou data filled that situational awareness gap. Without organic Iranian radar coverage of American naval movements in the Strait, but with access to Chinese satellite imagery at the update frequency that a modern reconnaissance satellite constellation provides, the IRGC could maintain a current operational picture of American naval dispositions without relying on the degraded organic sensor network that Epic Fury had systematically targeted. That satellite picture is now gone. The IRGC is now operating its remaining naval assets in the Strait with a degraded organic sensor network that Epic Fury produced.
Coastal radar systems have reduced coverage, shipborne sensors on vessels that have lost protected communications links that the Huawei infrastructure provided, and mobile surveillance assets that are operating without the satellite data integration that the Beidou arrangement had provided as a supplement to the organic picture.
The IRGC's fast attack boat captains who were transiting the Strait with two or three vessels per observation period under the prior arrangement now have a significantly degraded picture of where the AH-1Z Vipers are operating, where the Arleigh Burke destroyers are positioned, and what the American naval forces tactical geometry looks like at any given moment. Operating without that picture against a defensive architecture that includes the AN/SPY-6 radar tracking every contact in the Strait at 100 times the sensitivity of the previous generation system, and the Helios providing speed of light engagement against every resolved threat is not a tactical problem that the IRGC's remaining assets can solve with courage or doctrine.
It is an information asymmetry problem that has no remaining solution in the IRGC's current operational toolkit.
Now, let me give you the Huawei communication infrastructure dimension because the removal of the encrypted communication backbone that Chinese technical teams had installed and were maintaining throughout Iran's government and military communication architecture is the dimension of the flip that has the longest-running operational consequence for the Islamic Republic's internal security, as well as its military communication capability.
Huawei equipment is not simply hardware that functions independently after installation.
It requires ongoing software updates, security patches, and technical support from personnel with access to the system's source code and security architecture.
When Chinese technical teams are no longer providing that support, whether through explicit withdrawal or through the cessation of the intelligence sharing relationship that made their presence in Iran compatible with China's other strategic commitments, the encryption systems that the IRGC has been using for its most sensitive military communications become progressively more vulnerable to the intelligence collection capabilities of the American and Israeli signals intelligence architectures that have been continuously targeting them throughout the conflict. The RC-135 Rivet Joint electronic intelligence aircraft that has been orbiting the theater since before February 28th, collecting signals.
Intelligence is not passively waiting for the IRGC to make mistakes. It is actively building the exploitation database that allows it to make increasingly detailed assessments of the IRGC's communication patterns, protocol structures, and the specific vulnerabilities that emerge as the Huawei infrastructure ages without the technical support that kept its security architecture current.
The flips Huawei dimension is not an immediate capability collapse for the IRGC. It is a progressive degradation over weeks and months as the technical support withdrawal produces the security gaps that the signals intelligence collection is specifically positioned to exploit.
Now, let me give you the financial dimension's operational impact because the removal of Chinese banking intermediaries from the IRGC's offshore asset routing network is the financial warfare dimension of the flip that Operation Economic Fury has been specifically designed to capitalize on.
Secretary Bessant described the offshore asset tracking operation in terms that reveal the depth of the Treasury's financial intelligence penetration of the IRGC's asset network. The IRGC has money offshore. The Treasury has tracked it down. The administration will continue to track it down and preserve those assets for the Iranian people on the other side of this conflict. The Chinese banking intermediaries that had been routing IRGC-connected financial flows through Hong Kong and Shanghai correspondent banking relationships were the specific mechanism that had been providing the routing complexity that made the Treasury's tracking operation more difficult.
When those intermediaries stopped accepting IRGC-connected business in response to the secondary sanctions pressure that the Beijing summit's outcomes made it impossible for them to resist while maintaining their other international financial relationships, the IRGC's offshore asset network lost its most effective obfuscation layer.
Assets that had been routed through Chinese banking channels with enough correspondent banking steps between the IRGC source and the ultimate destination to complicate the Treasury's attribution effort are now either frozen or redirected through less sophisticated routing mechanisms that the Treasury's financial intelligence architecture can penetrate more directly. The sprint to the finish line that Besant described, the exhaustion of the IRGC's offshore reserve buffer, was made possible by the combined pressure of the UAE's reversal, the American Treasury's tracking capability, and the removal of the Chinese banking routing infrastructure that had been the IRGC's last sophisticated financial evasion mechanism.
Iran did not just lose China's diplomatic cover at the Beijing summit.
It lost the financial architecture that was supposed to outlast any blockade.
Now, let me give you the American strategic capitalization on the rift that the flip produced because the US Navy's response to China's repositioning has been both immediate and comprehensively prepared in ways that suggest the diplomatic outcome of the Beijing summit was anticipated and the operational exploitation plan was already in place when the summit produced its commitments.
The Trump Truth social post describing Xi's agreement as producing a very happy China because the strait is being permanently opened and him doing it for China also is not simply political communication. It is the public articulation of the strategic framework that the American naval blockade's architecture has been executing.
The United States is not simply enforcing a blockade against Iran. It is demonstrating to China and to the global energy market that American naval power can provide the guaranteed Hormuz access that Iran had been using as leverage against both simultaneously. When the United States permanently opens the Strait of Hormuz under American naval guarantee, it is offering China the energy transit security that China had been trying to secure through its relationship with Iran.
A relationship that required accepting the risk that Iran might exercise its Hormuz leverage against the very shipments that relationship was supposed to protect. Trump's framing, doing it for China also in the world, is the offer that was always structurally superior to what Iran was offering China. Guaranteed access versus threatened access.
American naval guarantee versus Iranian extortion.
The flip was not persuasion.
It was the moment China acknowledged the structural superiority of the alternative it had been resisting for strategic competition reasons rather than strategic interest reasons. The American strategic capitalization has been immediate. The 91 ships redirected by the blockade include vessels that had previously been transiting under the ambiguity of Chinese commercial relationships that had provided some protection against American interdiction pressure.
With the Chinese intermediary layer removed, those vessels' connections to Iranian commerce are more directly visible to the intelligence architecture that the blockade's enforcement is built on, and the interdiction confidence level required to redirect them is more easily reached. The blockade's enforcement deficiency has improved because the Chinese intelligence support that was helping Iran identify the surveillance gaps in American collection and route vessels through those gaps has been withdrawn. The Strait is more closed to Iranian commerce today than it was before the Beijing summit because the Chinese mapping of American collection gaps is no longer available to the IRGC's evasion planning.
Now, let me give you the global oil market's reaction to the flip and what it means for the price trajectory that every person reading energy market data right now is trying to understand.
Before the Beijing summit, the The oil market was pricing a risk premium that reflected the possibility of a prolonged Hormuz closure whose duration was uncertain because its resolution depended on an American-Iranian diplomatic process whose outcome was genuinely unpredictable.
The possibility that China would prevent a complete American victory through either direct military deterrence or economic pressure that forced American restraint was part of the risk premium's calculation.
Those who were holding the view that China would ultimately side with Iran in any comprehensive showdown were keeping a premium in the price that reflected the possibility of a multi-year Hormuz disruption backed by Chinese diplomatic and potentially military support. The Beijing summit's outcomes eliminated that tail risk from the probability distribution.
When China publicly commits to Hormuz being open and to not supplying military equipment to Iran, the scenario in which China prevents American enforcement of the Hormuz reopening becomes structurally impossible.
The risk premium's Chinese deterrence component has been priced out of the market. The remaining premium reflects the genuine uncertainty about the diplomatic timeline for a deal and the possibility of additional IRGC escalatory actions during the remaining window, neither of which is eliminated by the Chinese flip, but both of which are significantly constrained by it.
Brent crude's movement toward the $119 level after the Fujairah strike reflected the peak premium calculation before the Beijing summit.
The directional pressure from the summit's outcomes is toward premium compression as the global market processes the elimination of the Chinese tail risk that had been the most extreme bearish scenario for Hormuz reopening timelines. Qatar's two-to-three-year elevated price projection as the optimistic scenario was made before the Beijing summit removed the Chinese deterrence option from Iran's strategic toolkit.
The summit's outcomes have not resolved the crisis. The blockade is still running, the uranium is still in the tunnels, the IRGC is still not making the nuclear concession the American red line requires.
But the elimination of the Chinese deterrence option has compressed the probability distribution's tail in ways that the global energy market is beginning to price as directionally lower risk than it was 48 hours ago.
Now, let me give you the regional ripple effects that the Chinese flip has produced in the Saudi, UAE, Bahrain, Qatar coalition of states that have been managing their strategic positioning in careful awareness of the Chinese factor throughout the conflict. The Gulf Arab states have been operating under the implicit constraint that any military action against Iranian territory, even in direct retaliation for Iranian strikes on their own infrastructure, carried the risk of triggering a Chinese diplomatic response that would complicate American support for the coalition's actions and create international pressure for de-escalation before the military objectives could be achieved. Saudi Arabia's cruise missile strike on the IRGC command center at Bandar Abbas and the UAE's confirmed offensive strikes on Iranian oil infrastructure during the conflict were executed under that constraint in ways designed to be deniable or ambiguous enough to avoid triggering the Chinese diplomatic escalation response that an acknowledged Arab state military campaign against Iran would have produced. The Beijing summit's outcomes have altered that constraint fundamentally. When China publicly commits to Hormuz being open and characterizes the IRGC's escalatory actions as undesirable, which is the most direct diplomatic language available in Beijing's formulation for telling Iran it was wrong, the Gulf Arab states' potential military actions against Iranian targets lose the Chinese diplomatic complication risk that had been their primary deterrent.
The Arab coalition that every scenario analysis of this conflict's maximum escalation describes is one Beijing abstention or positive vote at the UN Security Council away from having the international legitimacy framework that converts its Article 51 self-defense rights into a formally acknowledged coalition military operation. The Beijing summit's outcomes have moved that abstention or positive vote from implausible to conceivable because China has publicly characterized Iranian attacks on Gulf state infrastructure as something it does not support and that it told Iranian negotiators directly to stop pursuing. A China that has told Iran's foreign minister face-to-face that restarting the conflict is undesirable is a China whose UN Security Council vote on a resolution related to Arab coalition self-defense operations against Iran is now subject to the same calculation that produced the Hormuz open commitment. The Gulf States energy importance to China's import arithmetic versus Iran's discounted oil importance.
The arithmetic favors the Gulf States.
It has always favored the Gulf States.
The Beijing Summit is the moment China stopped pretending it does not.
Now, let me give you the honest assessment of what the flip is and what it is not because the backstab narrative frame, while emotionally resonant, understates the complexity of what China is actually doing and overstates the completeness of the Iranian abandonment.
China has not severed its relationship with Iran. It has repositioned it from a relationship of active support to a relationship of benign neutrality expressed in the specific language of incapacity rather than choice. China is still buying Iranian oil at discounted prices through the routing mechanisms that have survived the Beijing Summit's restructuring. China is still maintaining some of the communication infrastructure that the Huawei installation produced inside Iran, though the active intelligence sharing relationship has been walked back to the maintenance level rather than the operational collaboration level it represented before the summit.
China is still running the three front strategy that we identified. Covert military support to Russia in Ukraine, active Taiwan contingency posturing, and public Hormuz peacemaker positioning.
And the Iran component of that strategy has been repositioned from active partnership to manage distance rather than from partnership to opposition.
The floating armory incident during the summit, where Chinese connected vessel positioned in the Persian Gulf at coordinates accessible to IRGC forces during the summit's peace framework construction, is the operational evidence that China's public diplomatic commitments and its operational behavior in the shadows remain in some tension.
The Beijing Summit's commitments are real and strategically significant. They are not the complete and final termination of every dimension of the China Iran relationship that the backstab narrative implies. What they are is the removal of the specific forms of Chinese support that had been making the American pressure campaign's terminal phase harder to execute. The satellite intelligence, the encrypted communications backbone, the financial routing, and the diplomatic cover, while preserving the fig leaf of the relationship for the face-saving purposes that Chinese institutional behavior consistently prioritizes in its management of strategic repositioning.
Here is the complete picture of why the Strait of Hormuz will never be the same after the Chinese flip, synthesized across every dimension we have analyzed.
The IRGC built its Hormuz leverage strategy on three pillars. First, the military pillar, the ability to threaten the Strait's navigability with mines, fast attack boats, drones, and missiles in ways that would impose costs exceeding the political will of any adversary to sustain. That pillar has been demolished by Operation Epic Fury, the blockade's enforcement, the AH-1Z Viper, the Helios directed energy deployment, and the Lamprey sub-surface tracking capability.
Second, the economic pillar, the ability to make the cost of enforcing Hormuz access greater than the revenue benefit of the oil that transits it, specifically by creating the uncertainty that drives the global risk premium high enough to generate political pressure on Washington to accommodate Iranian demands. That pillar has been demolished by the blockade's sustained enforcement at $500 million per day in economic damage to Iran, rather than the other direction, and by China's commitment to purchasing 600,000 barrels per day of American crude that converts the energy security benefit of Hormuz access from an American diplomatic service to a Chinese commercial interest that China is now invested in protecting rather than threatening. Third, the diplomatic pillar, the ability to use Chinese and Russian Security Council votes to prevent the international legitimacy framework for sustained American military enforcement, and the ability to use Chinese economic relationships as the alternative supply chain that allowed Iran to survive blockade pressure. That pillar has been demolished by Shi's Hormuz open commitment, his no military equipment commitment, his 600,000 barrels per day purchase commitment, and his direct message to Iraqi that restarting the conflict is undesirable. All three pillars gone. The Strait of Hormuz will never be the same, not because the IRGC's military capability has been temporarily degraded. Military capabilities can be rebuilt over time, but because the strategic architecture that made the Hormuz threat credible to the global market and to the diplomatic community has been permanently restructured by a Chinese repositioning whose arithmetic basis is not going to change. China will always import more from the Gulf than from Iran. China's Belt and Road financial exposure will not disappear. China's energy security dependence on American naval guarantee of Hormuz access is not a temporary condition. The math that produced the flip will continue producing the same answer every time anyone asks the question.
The Strait of Hormuz, the waterway through which 20% of the world's seaborne crude has transited for decades under the implicit threat of IRGC closure leverage, now operates under the explicit guarantee of American naval power with China's public endorsement, Iran's military incapacity, and the Gulf Arab coalition's demonstrated willingness to use offensive military force against Iranian infrastructure targets. The IRGC held the Strait of Hormuz hostage for 47 years by making the hostage-taking cost less than the cost of ending it. The cost calculation has been permanently inverted, and China just told the world it agrees.
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