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- <text>
- <title>
- (1982) The Marines Have Landed
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1982 Highlights
- </history>
- <link 11223>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- September 6, 1982
- MIDDLE EAST
- The Marines Have Landed
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>And the situation is well in hand as the P.L.O.'s exodus
- proceeds apace
- </p>
- <p> The ships were just offshore, riding at anchor, gray silhouettes
- of power in a classic setting of blue sky, bright sunshine and
- white clouds. At daybreak on Wednesday morning last week,
- precisely on time, 800 U.S. Marines landed at Beirut Port.
- Their mission: to assist, with 800 French and 500 Italian
- troops, in the task of evacuating 7,000 Palestine Liberation
- Organization guerrillas from the Lebanese capital. After the
- Marines landed, they soon had the situation well in hand. Said
- White House Spokesman Larry Speakes the next morning:
- "Everything is going according to plan."
- </p>
- <p> Speakes was referring not only to the arrival of the American
- forces but to the whole elaborate process of removing the P.L.O.
- fighters from Beirut. By Saturday at least 6,000 of the
- Palestinians had been evacuated by sea or land to other Arab
- countries, and the rest of them were expected to leave by the
- end of this week.
- </p>
- <p> The Lebanese crisis was by no means over. The country still
- contained an estimated 60,000 Israeli soldiers and perhaps half
- as many Syrian troops, and the two armies might yet wage a
- full-scale war with each other on Lebanese soil. Last week, in
- fact, sporadic fighting broke out between the Syrians and both
- the Israelis and the Christian Phalange forces, which are
- closely aligned with the Israelis. The Lebanese Parliament had
- elected a new national president, the leader of the Christian
- Phalangist forces. Bashir Gemayel, who was despised by many
- Lebanese Muslims as an "Israeli stooge." But the Israeli siege
- of West Beirut was over, and the domination of Lebanon by the
- P.L.O. was at an end.
- </p>
- <p> The Marines who disembarked in Beirut quickly took over the port
- area from the French units that had been there since the
- previous Saturday. First ashore was the flag-bearer, Lance
- Corporal James Dunaway, of Hattiesburg, Miss., followed by 200
- men of Company E of the 32nd Marine Amphibious Unit. A Marine
- emblem pinned to his shirt. U.S. Special Envoy Philip Habib,
- who had negotiated the agreement between Israel and the P.L.O.
- that led to the Palestinians' withdrawal, stepped forward to
- greet Marine Colonel James Mead, commander of the volunteer
- force.
- </p>
- <p> Mead's men were armed with M-16 rifles, M-60 machine guns,
- mortars, antitank rockets and antitank missiles. But Mead, 47,
- a strapping 6-ft. 6-in. Bostonian, assured reporters that he
- has "not anticipating any use of weapons, because we are here
- as peace keepers." He added, "Obviously, we'll use whatever we
- have in the unlikely event that we must defend ourselves. I
- must defend myself and my men." Mead was also greeted by
- Colonel Souhail Darghouth, commander of the Lebanese army units
- in the port area. "Ahlan we sahlan," said the Lebanese colonel.
- Habib, who has known a smattering of Arabic since his
- childhood, told Mead, "It means you are welcome here."
- </p>
- <p> The Reagan Administration went to considerable lengths to assure
- both Congress and the American public that U.S. troops were in
- no real danger. Reagan explained that the Marines would play
- "a crucial role in achieving the peace that is so desperately
- needed in this long-tortured city." The President alluded to
- the fact that, 24 years ago, a force of 14,000 Marines had been
- sent to Lebanon by Dwight Eisenhower to support a beleaguered
- government, and that they had suffered a few casualties. This
- time, declared the President, "want to emphasize that there is
- no intention or expectation that U.S. armed forces will become
- involved in hostilities," except perhaps for what he called
- "isolated acts of violence." To the Marines involved in the
- mission, the President radioed a rousing message: "You are
- about to embark on a mission of great importance to our nation
- and the free world...You are asked to be, once again, what
- Marines have been for more than 200 years: peacemakers."
- </p>
- <p> By the end of the week, the President had reason to be pleased
- with the progress of the evacuation. To be sure, there were
- some hitches. The Israelis complained that, in violation of the
- agreement, the first group of P.L.O. evacuees had been allowed
- to take their jeeps with them. The Lebanese protested that the
- Israelis were objecting to the placement of French peace-keeping
- forces in central Beirut. More serious was the fighting between
- Syrian and Israeli forces near the Beirut-Damascus highway in
- central Lebanon. This caused the P.L.O. to postpone a
- withdrawal over that route.
- </p>
- <p> To solve the problem, Envoy Habib flew to Tel Aviv for a talk
- with Israeli Defense Minister Ariel Sharon, who has directed the
- Israeli military operation in Lebanon. At the meeting, Sharon,
- who refuses to describe the removal of the P.L.O. guerrillas
- from West Beirut as an "evacuation," asked Habib bluntly," How
- is the expulsion going?" Replied Habib: "The evacuation is
- proceeding according to plan." Habib then asked Sharon to make
- sure that the Israeli and Christian forces allow the P.L.O.
- convoys to pass safely along the highway to Damascus. As a
- result of the meeting, the overland evacuation of the P.L.O. to
- Syria began on Friday when a convoy of trucks carrying
- celebrating guerrillas made the 70-mile trip to the outskirts
- of the Syrian capital.
- </p>
- <p> For the departing Palestinians, it was a time of brave words
- and wrenching farewells. In hundreds of cases, men left for
- unknown destinations, leaving wives and families behind. P.L.O.
- Chairman Yasser Arafat called the long siege of Beirut and the
- evacuation "a victory for the resistance." The P.L.O. did
- manage to sustain the sense of an honorable retreat, with flags
- flying and the endless cannonades and thunderous volleys of
- rockets. The departing guerrillas and the friends who saw them
- off fired their automatic rifles and machine guns so furiously
- that a U.S. Marine said he felt as though he were on a firing
- range. Stray bullets killed 17 and wounded at least 42 more.
- </p>
- <p> Nonetheless, the celebrations continued. When a shipload of
- guerrillas reached the Syrian port of Tartus, they were greeted
- by shouts of "Victory!" and "Palestine!" Five sheep were
- slaughtered on the dock and skinned to provide a carpet for the
- visitors to walk upon as they came ashore. When a four-year-old
- Palestinian boy in Beirut asked his father, "Why is everybody
- shooting?" he was told, "To celebrate a great victory." To
- which the boy replied, "But if the soldiers won, why are they
- going?" The answer, only partly obscured by the fanfare of the
- occasion, was that they had no choice; the Israelis had forced
- them out.
- </p>
- <p> Day after day, the exiled P.L.O. left Beirut for Syria, for
- Jordan, Sudan, Tunisia, North and South Yemen. Some 185 wounded
- guerrillas embarked on a Red Cross vessel bound for Cyprus and
- Greece. Conspicuous among the countries that had not agreed to
- accept a significant number of P.L.O. evacuees was Egypt, which
- had been asked by the U.S. to take a group of 3,000
- Palestinians. The government of President Hosni Mubarak
- refused, saying that the removal of the P.L.O. from Lebanon
- should be linked with diplomatic steps toward a comprehensive
- settlement of the Palestinian problem. Explained an Egyptian
- official: "When we signed the Camp David peace treaty, we were
- accused by other Arabs of only being concerned about a partial
- solution," that is, of getting the occupied Sinai back from
- Israel. "We do not want the same accusations to be leveled
- against us again." In the end, the Egyptians agreed merely to
- provide medical care for some of the Palestinian wounded and to
- pay canal tolls for the five ships scheduled to carry P.L.O.
- guerrillas to the Sudan and the Yemens.
- </p>
- <p> In Tunisia, President Habib Bourguiba welcomed a contingent of
- 1,100 Palestinians who arrived Saturday by sea. The Tunisians
- had been busy last week erecting a tent village near Beja, 60
- miles from Tunis, for the guerrillas. They were also
- refurbishing the Salwa Hotel at Borj Cedria, 16 miles southeast
- of the Tunisian capital, so that the tourist report might serve
- as either a temporary or permanent headquarters for Yasser
- Arafat and 100 or more of his colleagues. The hotel contains a
- luxury suite for Arafat, a not altogether appropriate residence
- for a man of spartan taste who sometimes prefers to sleep on the
- floor. Arafat's movements last week were something of a mystery.
- The Lebanese radio announced Saturday that he had sailed with
- some of his men that morning for Cyprus and from there would
- continue to Tunis, but his actual departure from Beirut was not
- confirmed. Once the evacuation is completed, some diplomats
- speculated, the P.L.O.'s fighting units would be based in
- Damascus, while Arafat would make his own headquarters in
- Tunisia.
- </p>
- <p> In the devastation of Beirut, there were some signs of an easing
- of tensions. Barricades were beginning to come down. The
- Italian forces, wearing white helmets adorned with black
- feathers, were a highly visible and almost festive presence.
- </p>
- <p> In Israel, there were indications that the almost universal
- condemnation the Israeli government has received abroad for its
- siege of West Beirut had made it ore truculent than ever. A
- case in point was the Israeli reaction to the Reagan
- Administration's plan to reassess the Camp David accords in the
- hope of reaching a settlement on the problem of Palestinian
- autonomy. A high Israeli official last week blustered that, if
- the U.S. were to try to "amend" Camp David, Israel would simply
- annex the West Bank, as it had wanted to do all along. That
- drastic step would create havoc in the Middle East, and the U.S.
- had no intention of letting it happen. But in the meantime,
- Washington policymakers had a more immediate problem to think
- about: how to negotiate the withdrawal of Syrian and Israeli
- forces from Lebanon before open warfare breaks out between them.
- </p>
- <p>-- By William E. Smith. Reported by Johanna McGeary/Washington
- and William Stewart/Beirut.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-