US orders nine warships to waters off Lebanon
by Jim MannionTue Jul 18, 4:14 PM ET
The United States ordered nine warships to waters off the
Lebanese coast amid fears of possible terrorist attacks on ships
evacuating US nationals, officials said.
Though only 124 Americans have been brought out so far, the
State Department defended the speed of the evacuation, calling
it "highly organized, very efficient, very active."
Six days after the start of hostilities between Israel and
Lebanon, the first US chartered cruise ship arrived in Beirut to
pick up US citizens, and the US Navy ordered the nine ships to
waters off Lebanon.
The vessels, including four amphibious assault ships now in the
Red Sea and the Indian Ocean, will be used to bring out large
numbers of Americans and provide security amid fears of
terrorist attacks, said Vice Admiral Patrick Walsh, the
commander of US Fifth Fleet.
"I'm concerned about attacks on ships, you bet," he told
reporters here via videolink from his headquarters in Bahrain.
Ferries and cruise ships have been able to move freely between
Lebanon and Cyprus so far, and the US navy has been making
arrangements to hire more commercial vessels to bring out
Americans, officials said.
But Walsh said, "It's prudent not to assume anything when we go
into an environment like this. So we make all preparations in
our planning and deliberations so we're ready for any
contingency."
"That sort of scenario is something we are planning for," he
said.
The first of four amphibious warships is expected to enter the
eastern Mediterranean on Wednesday and the others will arrive
over the course of the week, he said.
They include the helicopter carrier USS Iwo Jima, two amphibious
dock landing ships, and an amphibious transport dock ship.
About 2,200 marines are aboard the Iwo Jima, including a
battalion and a medium lift helicopter squadron.
Walsh said landing craft and helicopters will be used to move
Americans to the safety of the amphibious warships which he said
can hold about 1,000 people.
A guided missile destroyer, the USS Gonzalez, was already in the
area to provide security, officials said. Other warships were
coming from elsewhere in the European theater, the Red Sea and
the Indian Ocean, Walsh said.
The Orient Queen, a Greek cruise ship hired Monday, docked in
Beirut and was boarding Americans, and another chartered vessel
with space for 1,400 passengers was due to arrive Wednesday,
Walsh said.
"The threat level presently allows for to us move the ferry back
and forth. We will take advantage of that to the maximum extent
possible," he said.
"But we'll also have warships positioned strategically and
tactically in order to ensure the safe and secure passage of
American citizens from Lebanon to Cyprus," he said.
Until now the US evacuation has consisted of a half dozen CH-53
helicopters that have flown only 124 Americans to safety in
Cyprus since Sunday.
Walsh said the mobilization of US naval forces had been ordered
earlier but took time to assemble because of the distances
involved, and because the marines aboard the amphibious ships
were engaged in an exercise in Jordan.
France and Italy already have major evacuations underway. About
900 mostly French nationals arrived in Cyprus on Tuesday by
chartered ferry from Beirut. An Italian warship brought out
another 300 people Monday.
Democrats wrote to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice urging
that all resources be made available for a swift evacuation of
Americans.
"Reports that American citizens who have been registered with
the State Department are not being evacuated immediately are
enormously troubling," Senator Harry Reid, the minority leader,
and senior senators Carl Levin and Ted Kennedy, said in the
letter.
Representative Nancy Pelosi (news, bio, voting record), the top
Democrat in the House of Representatives, criticized the State
Department for demanding that US citizens sign agreements to
repay their transportation costs.
"I think we moved very fast," Undersecretary of State Nicholas
Burns told CNN television.
"We're highly organized, very efficient, very active. We're on
this one and doing a good job," he said.
Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said the United States was in
discussions to hire four or five other commercial vessels of
varying size for the evacuation.
Israel has imposed a naval blockade on Lebanon, and its fighter
jets have severely damaged Beirut International Airport and
struck roads, bridges and other infrastructure in retaliation
for the Hezbollah missile attacks on northern Israel.
The US embassy has discouraged Americans from trying to get out
of the country by road to Syria, warning of the danger of
Israeli airstrikes.
The State Department estimates there are 25,000 Americans in
Lebanon, and about 15,000 of them have registered with the US
embassy.
Military officials said helicopters flew out 60 people on
Tuesday, 43 on Monday and 21 on Sunday. Another 60 passengers
were due to fly back later in the day, they said.
But the State Department was generally reserving those flights
for Americans with special needs and will rely instead on
chartered vessels for the bulk of evacuees, Whitman said.
Copyright © 2006 Agence France Presse.
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