Washington The bodies of five U.S. Marines killed in an air crash in Pakistan returned to U.S. soil, and more than two dozen al-Qaida and Taliban prisoners were en route to detention in Cuba.
Military investigators continued to search the crash site in the rugged mountain area of southwest Pakistan for the last of the seven victims and clues to what caused the crash of the military refueling plane Wednesday.
"The search will continue," said Lt. Col. Martin Compton of the U.S. Central Command. "The Marines will leave no one behind."
U.S. warplanes struck again near the eastern Afghanistan village of Zawar, at the site of a huge complex of caves, tunnels and buildings the Pentagon says was used as an underground hide-out by al-Qaida and Taliban members. After more than a week of strikes, Sunday's bombing appeared to be the heaviest attack since last month's strikes on the al-Qaida cave complex at Tora Bora farther northeast.
A plane carrying the remains of five Marines killed in the plane crash arrived shortly before midnight Sunday at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware after a flight from the U.S. Rhein-Main Air Base in Germany.
The names of the Marines found were not released. Central Command officials said they were expecting the remains of six Marines to be on the flight, but authorities at Dover said there were only five coffins.
The base chaplain, Lt. Col. Jim Barlow, led a short prayer before the flag-draped coffins were taken to the base mortuary. It was not clear when the bodies would be flown to their final destination. All were based at Marine Corps Air Station Miramar in San Diego
In the southern Afghan city of Kandahar, 30 prisoners departed for the U.S. military base at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba, three days after the first group of prisoners was transferred to the high security facility.
Shackled and with white caps covering their faces, they shuffled in the darkness late Sunday, Afghan time, into a C-17 transport plane for the flight to eastern Cuba. Lights at the U.S. base at the Kandahar airport were shut off except for red low-intensity lights and green chemical lighting. Security was tight, with attack dogs and Humvees with 50-caliber machine guns patrolling the area.
The first group of 20 detainees left Thursday and arrived in Guantanamo Bay the following day.
The base at the Kandahar airport is the site of the main detention center for al-Qaida and Taliban prisoners from the war. Officials said 464 were in U.S. custody altogether _ 413 in Afghanistan, the 20 in Cuba, the 30 in transit and American John Walker Lindh on the USS Bataan in the Arabian Sea.
In Wednesday's crash, the seven were killed when their Marine KC-130 fuel tanker slammed into a mountainside and exploded while approaching an air base Americans have been using at Shamsi in southwestern Pakistan. Although U.S. forces in Pakistan have occasionally faced gunfire and other hostile actions, Defense Department officials say they have no evidence hostile fire brought down the plane.
Military officials also have said they have no indication that bad weather caused the crash, which caused an explosion that was seen and heard in a Pakistani town 20 miles (30 kilometers) away.
Also at the Kandahar base, an Army advance team from the 101st Airborne was preparing for the arrival of what officials said would be at least 2,000 more troops.
The Marines established and secured the Kandahar base and will be rotating out with the U.S. Army taking over responsibilities there.



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