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U.S. Deploys 1,000 Marines to Storm-Ravaged Philippines

The U.S. military said Thursday it was deploying 1,000 Marines to support emergency relief operations in the Philippines following Super Typhoon Haiyan.

About 900 troops will board two U.S. Navy amphibious ships -- the Japan-based USS Germantown and USS Ashland -- and are due in the Philippines in about six days, Marine Forces Pacific said in a statement.

An additional 100 Marines from the same unit will travel to the region by aircraft.

The ships were set to bring heavy engineering equipment -- including backhoes, dump trucks and wreckers -- amphibious assault vehicles, a tracked vehicle that can operate in the water and on land, generators and "water bull" portable water tanks.

Up to eight MV-22 Osprey tilt-rotor aircraft were also set to fly to Manila's international airport in the coming days, doubling the number of Ospreys available in the area.

The Marines, who will assist with road clearance and relief supply distribution, will travel by landing craft utility boats, landing craft air cushion vehicles, assault amphibious vehicles, small boats and rotary wing aircraft.

The announcement came hours after the USS George Washington arrived in the Philippines with 5,000 sailors aboard, bearing badly needed equipment, supplies and expertise for the thousands left homeless and hungry by one of the strongest storms in history.

It is one of eight American ships currently in the region as part of "Operation Damayan" -- Tagalog for "solidarity."

U.S. President Barack Obama, meanwhile, urged Americans to donate generously to their former Asian colony.

Source: Agence France Presse


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