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NewsJanuary 13, 2002

Military investigators have recovered the bodies of five of the seven U.S. Marines killed when their plane crashed in Pakistan this week, a military spokesman said Saturday. The remains will be flown to Dover Air Force Base in Delaware, and should arrive there either today or Monday, said Maj. Brad Lowell, a spokesman for U.S. Central Command headquarters in Tampa, Fla...

From staff and wire reports

Military investigators have recovered the bodies of five of the seven U.S. Marines killed when their plane crashed in Pakistan this week, a military spokesman said Saturday.

The remains will be flown to Dover Air Force Base in Delaware, and should arrive there either today or Monday, said Maj. Brad Lowell, a spokesman for U.S. Central Command headquarters in Tampa, Fla.

The Marine KC-130 refueling tanker crashed into a mountain and exploded Wednesday near an air base at Shamsi, in southwestern Pakistan. Military officials have said they have no evidence hostile fire caused the crash but have not determined what did.

Capt. Daniel McCollum, the plane's co-pilot, was the son-in-law of Bill and Jenny Harkey of Cape Girardeau.

An investigative team was at the crash site Saturday, searching for remains of the other two Marines and looking for clues to the cause of the crash, Lowell said. It was the single most deadly incident in the anti-terrorism campaign in Afghanistan, which began Oct. 7.

On Friday, U.S. warplanes again struck a huge al-Qaida training complex in eastern Afghanistan, acting on evidence that more members of the terrorist network had arrived there, Lowell said.

The airstrikes hit buildings and caves in the Zawar Kili area, several mountainous square miles near the Afghan city of Khost, near the Pakistan border. American B-52, F/A-18 and B-1B planes dropped bombs on the area, Lowell said.

A U.S. AC-130 gunship also joined the attacks, Lowell said. Those low-flying planes use rapid-fire cannons and mortars and are often deployed against vehicles and buildings the military believes contain enemy forces.

"We do have information that the training camp had been reoccupied by members of al-Qaida," Lowell said.

Defense Department officials had said Friday they believed al-Qaida had abandoned Zawar Kili after days of repeated U.S. airstrikes.

Prisoner released

Meanwhile, U.S. forces released one prisoner in Afghanistan after determining he "was of no value," Lowell said. The man was set free and not turned over to Afghan or other authorities, Lowell said.

That brought the number of detainees in U.S. custody in or near Afghanistan to 444. Most of them, 391, were at the U.S. base in the southern Afghan city of Kandahar. Another 52 were being held at the air base in Bagram, north of Kabul, the capital.

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John Walker Lindh, the American captured while fighting with the Taliban in Afghanistan, remained imprisoned aboard the USS Bataan in the Arabian Sea.

Twenty more al-Qaida and Taliban prisoners are incarcerated at Guantanamo Bay Naval Station in Cuba.

Interrogations of the detainees and searches of former Taliban and al-Qaida sites in Afghanistan have yielded information that helped authorities break up alleged al-Qaida terrorist cells in Singapore and elsewhere, officials said Friday.

Singapore's government said a videotape and other al-Qaida material found in Afghanistan helped it thwart plans to blow up Western embassies, U.S. Navy vessels, a shuttle bus carrying American military members and the offices of U.S. companies.

Gen. Richard Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the videotape given to the Singaporean government was not the first indication of a threat.

U.S. officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said several countries besides Singapore had used information gathered in Afghanistan to break up al-Qaida cells. They would not elaborate.

Hunting for information

Finding information that could prevent new terrorist attacks is "equally or more important" to the United States than finding Osama bin Laden and his top al-Qaida commanders, U.S. Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld said Friday.

U.S. officials are studying intelligence from terrorist bases and prisoners in Afghanistan for clues that could disrupt plans for attacks even deadlier than those on Sept. 11, Rumsfeld said.

Although al-Qaida leaders no longer can operate effectively inside Afghanistan, U.S. officials have believed since before the military campaign began Oct. 7 that al-Qaida cells in other parts of the world have attack plans that could be implemented even in bin Laden's absence.

Rumsfeld said prisoners from al-Qaida and Afghanistan's former ruling Taliban militia told U.S. interrogators that two senior Taliban leaders were killed weeks ago by American bombs. Rumsfeld said those claims could be "disinformation" from the prisoners, however.

In all, no more than 15 senior al-Qaida and Taliban figures have been captured or killed, Rumsfeld said.

Rumsfeld gave no indication that the U.S. military was moving closer to finding bin Laden or other senior leaders of al-Qaida or the Taliban. He said the manhunt would continue, and in the meantime the interrogation of prisoners and the capture of documents were providing vast amounts of new information.

He said the information is being gleaned from "an enormous number of documents and videotapes and computer disks and hard drives and laptops and portable phones and address books and the like."

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