By LARRY MARGASAK
Associated Press Writer |
WASHINGTON – The Pentagon said Wednesday no more survivors are expected to be
pulled from the rubble following the terrorist attack that sent a jetliner into
the side of the building. Search-and-rescue officials said 80 bodies had been
pulled from the wreckage.
"The area of the Pentagon where the aircraft struck and burned sustained
catastrophic damage. Anyone who might have survived the initial impact and
collapse could not have survived the fire that followed," the Defense Department
said in a written statement.
Arlington, Va., fire officials involved in the search and rescue estimated
that 100 to 800 people may have died.
J.H. Schwartz, assistant fire chief for Arlington, said rescuers had pulled
about 80 bodies from the building so far but it was too early to know how many
more could be retrieved Wednesday.
"We want to assure that we have a safe working environment for the firemen
going into that building," Schwartz said.
Only about half of the massive building, struck Tuesday by a hijacked
American Airlines jet, had power. Many of the 24,000 employees were asked not to
come to work.
Smoke billowed from the damaged and collapsed areas on the southwestern side
of the building, drifting over the northern Virginia skyline. Jet fuel had
caused an intense fire.
The Pentagon said nobody in the vicinity of the impact could have survived
and listening devices haven't discovered signs of life.
U.S. officials held out the hope that some people might be found in adjacent
areas after a wrecking ball is used to clear unstable rubble.
Teams of a dozen rescuers are equipped with dogs that can differentiate
between bodies and live victims; acoustic listening devices that can pick up the
faintest sound; and sophisticated cameras.
Around the area of impact along the building's perimeter, where a section of
the building collapsed, FBI evidence teams found parts of the fuselage from the
Boeing 757, Tamillow said. No large pieces apparently survived.
Agents also were looking for the plane's flight-data and cockpit voice
recorders.
Air inside the Pentagon was tinged with the scent of an electrical fire. In
corridors where workers gathered, water and electricity, phone lines and
computers were in full use.
But many corridors ended in blacked-out hallways. Yellow tape and Defense
Department policemen warned people away.
The plane smashed a 35-foot area across five floors. The aircraft entered the
building in the wedge between two corridors, collapsing the outermost ring of
the building.
Pentagon officials asked workers in surrounding corridors not to enter their
offices because of structural damage.
The chairman of the Joint Chiefs, Army Gen. Henry H. Shelton, was in his
office early Wednesday, as was Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, officials
said.
In the air around the Pentagon, helicopters frequently landed and took off.
Military trucks and jeeps went by in convoys. Ambulances and firefighting
equipment ringed the area.
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Associated Press writer Susanne M. Schafer contributed to this report.
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