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WASHINGTON, Sept. 24 (Xinhuanet) -- The Pentagon
announced Saturday that a reinforcement force of 500 US soldiers are on their
way to the country's southern areas hit by Hurricane Rita.
The troops from the 82nd Airborne Division are
heading to a place near New Orleans, Louisiana, to help with search-and-rescue
efforts after Rita made a predawn landfall between Louisiana and Texas, it said.
Meanwhile, five mortuary teams will also be
dispatched to Texas,joining the other five military communication teams which
have already been there to help rescue efforts.
The Pentagon said another 3,200 soldiers will be sent
to the hurricane zone by Sunday if needed.
At present, US President George W. Bush is tracking
Rita's movement within an Air Force base at the headquarters of the US Northern
Command, Colorado.
Later in the day, Bush plans to fly to Austin, Texas,
to visit the state's emergency operation center and then to San Antonio where he
will spend the night.
As part of the national emergency arrangement in the
aftermath of Sept.11 terror attacks, the US Northern Command was put in charge
of the military's hurricane response.
Ahead of Rita's landfall, the command sent satellite
phones andlong-range radios to avoid post-hurricane communication breakdowns.
Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) Acting
Director David Paulison said Saturday morning that he thought the government has
done what should be done at this point.
"Right now, we just have to wait out the storm, see
exactly where it makes landfall, and then move ahead with our supplies that we
have on the ground and our resources," he said.
Days before Rita's landfall, FEMA has stockpiled four
days' worth of food, water and ice in Texas and Louisiana, and the Pentagon
added 13,273 active-duty troops to the 36,108 National Guard personnel stationed
throughout the region, according to Paulison. Enditem |