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FILE-In this file picture taken Nov. 2, 2013 photo an Afghan scrap dealer checks to see if a head light bought as junk from the U.S. military is working at a junk yard in Kandahar, southern Afghanistan. As the United States military packs up to leave Afghanistan, ending 13 years of war, it is looking to sell or dispose of billions of dollars in military hardware, including its sophisticated and highly specialized mine resistant vehicles, but finding a buyer is complicated in a region where relations between neighboring countries are mired in suspicion and outright hostility.(AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus, file)

FILE-In this file picture taken Nov. 2, 2013 photo an Afghan scrap dealer checks to see if a head light bought as junk from the U.S. military is working at a junk yard in Kandahar, southern Afghanistan. As the United States military packs up to leave Afghanistan, ending 13 years of war, it is looking to sell or dispose of billions of dollars in military hardware, including its sophisticated and highly specialized mine resistant vehicles, but finding a buyer is complicated in a region where relations between neighboring countries are mired in suspicion and outright hostility.(AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus, file)

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