military transported just under 11,000 personnel. our mission remained focussed on ensuring a steady flow of evacuees out of kabul to the intermediate staging bases and safe havens at our insulations continue to rapidly build out capacity as needed to ensure reception and providing humanitarian assistance. the use of temporary safe haven locations across europe and the middle east in areas that include u.s. insulations in qatar, uae, kuwait, bahrain, italy, spain and germany. we deeply appreciate the support from these countries. this is truly a testament to the importance of our alliances and our partnerships. in the past 24 hours, five flights landed at dulles international airport with approximately 1,300 passengers.
now set to receive them, fort lee, fort mccoy and fort blis. the capacity at those three bases, we want to get up to 22,000 capacity. we re not there yet. understandably. we re building out to that. as the secretaries made clear to the department, if we fleneed t offer addition flal installations here, we ll do that. right now we think we can get up to 22,000 in relatively short order here over the next coming days and weeks. we ll see where that goes. we ll say the other afghans at risk, would you look at insulations like the air base italy or other u.s. bases? that s really a better question put to the state department that runs that part of the immigration process. that wouldn t be our call to
times and he says that s not first large scale insulations using a whole range of media but drawings and sketches are still central to his creative process and now a new exhibition in munich puts his multifaceted skills on show we have karen hopes that from our culture just to tell us more about this so karen sounds like a bit of a scaled down version of typical yeah that s right i mean this is the guy who seems to have an almost sort of superhuman command of the elements i mean we usually see some working with. light water air temperature to sort of created desired effect or to get his point across that he s also very much of course into putting his works into the context of public space is a very large ones at that so this is really kind of like going back in the timeline of his creative process it s called watercolors and we ll see why in just a moment and it shows that sort of after that initial spark in his brain everything begins on the page. next edition that shows another side
cancer. reporter: geraldine watkins is afraid. her family has lived in st. john the baptist parrish for almost 40 years. she loves the people but recently she learned that she and 20,000 others who live nearby have the highest risk in the country of developing cancer from air toxins. the toxin in this case is chloroprene, according to data, the risk for people who live in this area highlighted in red ranges from roughly five to more than 20 times the national average. i was outraged because i m trying to figure out why people hadn t been informed of this earlier. reporter: the source is this plant owned by denka, the japanese company bought it from dupont in late 20156789 the company makes a synthetic rubber found in wet suits, electric insulations and other products.
zpl good ev it really is. some 16 years after the 9/11 attacks, we have an extraordinary look at some of those special operations forces who led the way in the opening days of the war. on my orders, the united states military has begun strikes against al-qaeda terrorist training camps and military insulations of the taliban regime in afghanistan. less than a month after the 9/11 attacks, president bush publicly went to war. that is for intelligence. but a secret war was underway. in the documentary, legion of brothers, cnn presents for the first time, the personal stories of special operations forces in afghanistan that led the way to bring down the taliban that sheltered osama bin laden. any film about war is about her r heroism, sacrifice and loss. it s not a pro war or antiwar