Remains of All Missing US Sailors Recovered after USS McCain Collision

The US Navy guided-missile destroyer USS John S. McCain is seen after a collision, in Singapore waters August 21, 2017. REUTERS/Ahmad Masood
The US Navy guided-missile destroyer USS John S. McCain is seen after a collision, in Singapore waters August 21, 2017. REUTERS/Ahmad Masood
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Remains of All Missing US Sailors Recovered after USS McCain Collision

The US Navy guided-missile destroyer USS John S. McCain is seen after a collision, in Singapore waters August 21, 2017. REUTERS/Ahmad Masood
The US Navy guided-missile destroyer USS John S. McCain is seen after a collision, in Singapore waters August 21, 2017. REUTERS/Ahmad Masood

Divers have recovered the remains of all 10 US sailors killed after their warship John S. McCain collided with an oil tanker off Singapore, the US Navy said Monday.

The remaining eight sailors were retrieved by divers searching flooded compartments of the guided-missile destroyer, it said, after the discovery of two bodies was announced last week.

John S. McCain collided with the Alnic MC east of Singapore as it headed for a routine stop in the city-state last Monday last week, leaving a gaping hole in the vessel's hull and flooding it with water.

It was the second such deadly accident in two months after a US destroyer collided with a cargo ship off Japan in June, and the fourth accident involving an American warship in the Pacific this year.

The US Navy's Seventh Fleet, to which the warship belonged, said in a statement that "divers have now recovered the remains of all 10 USS John S. McCain sailors.”

The sailors were aged between 20 and 39.

"The incident is under investigation to determine the facts and circumstances of the collision," the statement added.

The pre-dawn collision sparked a multinational search and rescue operation by aircraft, divers and vessels off Singapore but it was called off after several days, and authorities shifted their focus to flooded parts of the ship.

The accident prompted the navy to begin a global investigation and remove the commander of the Japan-headquartered Seventh Fleet, the centerpiece of the US military presence in Asia.

The Seventh Fleet, headquartered in Japan, operates as many as 70 ships, including the US navy's only forward-deployed aircraft carrier, and has about 140 aircraft and 20,000 sailors.



Extreme Weather Turns Beijing into Rain Trap, Kills at Least 30 

An aerial view shows an overflowing river amid flooding due to heavy rains at Xinanjuang village in Miyun district, on the outskirts of Beijing on July 29, 2025. (AFP)
An aerial view shows an overflowing river amid flooding due to heavy rains at Xinanjuang village in Miyun district, on the outskirts of Beijing on July 29, 2025. (AFP)
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Extreme Weather Turns Beijing into Rain Trap, Kills at Least 30 

An aerial view shows an overflowing river amid flooding due to heavy rains at Xinanjuang village in Miyun district, on the outskirts of Beijing on July 29, 2025. (AFP)
An aerial view shows an overflowing river amid flooding due to heavy rains at Xinanjuang village in Miyun district, on the outskirts of Beijing on July 29, 2025. (AFP)

Extreme weather killed at least 30 people in Beijing after a year's worth of rain fell in a matter of days, stretching the Chinese capital's disaster management capabilities and prompting some experts to call the city a rain trap.

Much of the rain inundated Beijing's mountainous north near the Great Wall, with 28 deaths reported in the district of Miyun and two in Yanqing, the official Xinhua news agency said on Tuesday. It did not say when or how the deaths occurred.

Heavy rain started last Wednesday and intensified around Beijing and surrounding provinces on Monday, with the capital experiencing rainfall of up to 543.4 mm (21.4 inches) in its northern districts, Xinhua said. The average annual rainfall in Beijing is around 600 mm.

"The cumulative amount of precipitation has been extremely high - reaching 80–90% of the annual total in just a few days in some areas," said Xuebin Zhang of the University of Victoria in Canada and CEO of the Pacific Climate Impacts Consortium (PCIC).

"Very few systems are designed to handle such an intense volume of rainfall over such a short period," Zhang said.

The local topography - mountains to the west and north - "trapped" the moist air and forced it to rise, enhancing the extraordinary amount of precipitation, he said.

China's usually arid north has seen record precipitation in recent years, with some scientists linking the rainfall to global warming.

In the summer of 2023, heavy rain and flooding killed at least 33 people in Beijing. Rainfall in the city of Xingtai in neighboring Hebei province exceeded 1,000 mm in two days - double the yearly average.

Late on Monday, President Xi Jinping said there had been "heavy casualties and property losses" in Beijing and the provinces of Hebei, Jilin and Shandong, and ordered "all-out" search and rescue efforts.

More than 80,000 Beijing residents had been relocated, Xinhua reported, with roads and communication infrastructure damaged and power to 136 villages cut off overnight.

The most intense rain occurred on Saturday in Beijing's hilly Huairou, which saw 95.3 mm of rain in one hour. In Miyun on Monday, some people were trapped at an elderly care center as water levels rose close to the roof. Emergency rescue services swam into the building and used ropes to pull out 48 people.

On Tuesday, parks, libraries and museums including the Palace Museum at the Forbidden City were closed. Train and bus services in the suburbs and along waterways were suspended. Hundreds of flights were cancelled or delayed at Beijing's two airports, state media reported.

'FLOOD STILL COMING'

Heavy rain also pounded the province of Hebei and the city of Tianjin neighboring Beijing, which are all part of the vast Hai River basin.

Four people were killed in a landslide in Hebei on Monday, with eight still missing, as six months' worth of rain fell over the weekend.

In two villages in Tianjin on Monday, major roads were flooded, bridges damaged, with only the roofs of single-storey houses visible, China Central Television (CCTV) reported.

Heavy rain is expected to persist in parts of Beijing, Hebei and Tianjin on Tuesday, the emergency management ministry said Monday night, adding that "the disaster relief situation is complex and severe."

Some residents in the region posted on social media platform Weibo calling on authorities to expedite rescue efforts.

"The flood is still coming, and there is still no power or signal, and I still can't get in touch with my family!" a post on Tuesday morning said.