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Gunfire broke out near the heavily guarded Marine base at Kandahar airport as the U.S. Air Force C-17 took off -- a sign of how the area around the city that was once a stronghold of the Taliban remains insecure.

Shortly after the aircraft left the runway, the base received small arms fire, and Marines responded with heavy outgoing fire, Marine Lt. James Jarvis told The Associated Press. He said he knew of no U.S. casualties in the firefight, which witnesses said lasted about a half-hour.

The prisoners are being taken to the American base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba -- and the U.S. military is taking no chances with them, since other al-Qaida and Taliban fighters captured in the Afghan conflict have staged bloody uprisings against their captors.

``These are dangerous individuals,'' Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld said in Washington on Thursday. ``There are among these prisoners people who are perfectly willing to kill themselves and kill other people.'' He said those overseeing the transfer have been told to use ``appropriate restraint.''

During the flights to Cuba, prisoners were to be chained to their seats -- and possibly be sedated, forced to use portable urinals and be fed by their guards -- according to USA Today and television reports.

The Pentagon subsequently barred news organizations from transmitting pictures taken as the prisoners board the plane, citing Red Cross objections. The Red Cross denied it had raised the issue with the U.S. military.

The exchange of fire at the base brought U.S. warplanes out hours later patrolling around Kandahar, a rare event since U.S. bombing ended in the area. To the north of the base lies a highway running parallel to the east-west runway. Mud houses on the other side of the road provide some of the only cover in the area; the rest of the base is surrounded by bare fields, a few houses, and an old mine field.

Although the Taliban lost control of Kandahar and other major Afghan cities under the combined assault of U.S. airstrikes and offensives by Afghan fighters, security in the country is tentative at best. Many of the deposed militia's fighters have disappeared into Afghanistan's rugged terrain or have blended into civilian populations.

In the capital, Kabul, British peacekeeping forces and newly deputized Afghan police on Thursday formally launched joint patrols of the city in an effort to restore security and civilians' trust. The new Afghan government has ordered men with guns off the city streets.

There were fewer weapons seen in Kabul on Thursday, but occasional pickup trucks crammed with men with rocket launchers and automatic rifles still roared through the streets. Men in camouflage uniforms, apparently soldiers, still were out despite being ordered to return to their barracks.

Meanwhile, Pakistani and U.S. recovery teams converged on the crash site of a Marine KC-130 refueling tanker that struck a mountain near a remote base in Pakistan near the Afghan border and exploded in flames Wednesday. Seven Marines were killed, the worst American casualty toll of the Afghan war.

The base -- in the southwestern Baluchistan province of vast deserts and rugged mountains -- has been used by the U.S. military as a forward staging point.

Rumsfeld said the crash apparently was created by the fuel-laden plane's impact into a mountain ridge rather than by hostile fire.

``There is no evidence that it was anything other than an aircraft crash,'' Rumsfeld told reporters.

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