BEIRUT, Lebanon, July 19, 2006

Americans Line Up To Leave Lebanon

In Israel, Witnesses Believe They Saw Another Israeli Soldier Captured

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(CBS/AP)  The 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit was ordered into the waters off Lebanon to help with the evacuation. The U.S. military will have six CH-53 Super Stallion helicopters available to move 300 passengers a day out of Lebanon. Other U.S. ships should arrive in a day or so.

Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said the U.S. also is considering contracting with as many as four more commercial ships that could each carry between 200 and more than 1,000 passengers.

Lebanese-American Jonathan Chakhtoura says he is extremely disappointed in the U.S. response.

"Every time I call to see what's going on the lines are busy. When they answer, they say they don't know," the 19-year-old fashion design student said. "A lot of people don't know what is going on. There is so much confusion. If it's security they are worried about, then I think we will be more secure if we know what is going on."

The State Department says it is not yet known how many Americans will ultimately be evacuated, because some may change their minds as conditions there either improve or deteriorate.

The State Department said Monday that it is asking Americans to reimburse the government for the expense of being evacuated from Lebanon.

"What we have to do in a situation like this is, we have to go out on an emergency basis and rent vessels," Burns said. "That's what we're trying to do... We do that on behalf of American citizens."

House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi objects to the billing of evacuees.

"A nation that can provide more than $300 billion for a war in Iraq can provide the money to get its people out of Lebanon," said Pelosi.

European nations also intensified their evacuation effort Tuesday with a British naval ship ferrying 180 people, mostly Britons and a Greek navy frigate, carrying about 400 Greeks, Cypriots and other Europeans. Six chartered passenger ships are due in Lebanon Wednesday to begin evacuating up to 25,000 Canadians.

Tuesday, a proposal to send a new international force to bolster the current 2,000-member U.N. force in south Lebanon gained steam.

Western nations have proposed the beefed-up force as part of a possible ceasefire agreement. U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan says a new force must be "considerably" larger and better armed than the current force, which is viewed as weak and ineffectual.

U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan is to brief the Security Council Thursday on efforts to negotiate a ceasefire.

CBS News Foreign Affairs Analyst Pamela Falk says the proposal for a U.N. stabilization force, proposed by Annan and British Prime Minister Tony Blair, has already met with some resistance from U.S. Ambassador John Bolton, who said earlier in the week that the mechanisms were already in place under U.N. resolutions to disarm Lebanese militias."

Israeli Foreign Minister Livni said securing south Lebanon "requires activity by the Lebanese government, with the oversight (and) assistance of the international community."

Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert says "the start of negotiations will not stop this [military] operation. Only the return of the kidnapped soldiers will."

Israeli Cabinet minister Avi Dichter said the country might consider a prisoner swap with Lebanon to win the soldiers' release, but only after the military operation is complete.

Israel's offensive against Hezbollah was sparked by the capture of Israeli soldiers in a cross-border raid but has now broadened into a campaign to weaken Hezbollah.

In Washington Tuesday, President Bush had a warning for Syria.

"It's in our interest for Syria to stay out of Lebanon and for this government to survive," said Mr. Bush. "The root cause of the problem is Hezbollah and that problem needs to addressed."

He said there are suspicions that the instability caused by the Hezbollah attacks will cause some in Lebanon to invite Syria back into the nation.

In an exclusive interview with CBS News correspondent Richard Roth, a top Syrian official denied his country is giving weapons to Hezbollah and offered to help resolve the crisis. (Click here to watch the video.)

U.S. Secretary Condoleezza Rice says any ceasefire agreement should be based on fundamental changes that would have a lasting impact on the region.

"We all want a cessation of violence. We all want the protection of civilians. We have to make certain that anything that we do is going to be of lasting value," said Rice.

"A ceasefire that would leave the status quo ante intact is absolutely unacceptable," said White House spokesman Tony Snow, reinforcing Rice's comments. "A ceasefire that would leave intact a terrorist infrastructure is unacceptable... So what we're trying to do is work as best we can toward a ceasefire is that going to create not only the conditions, but the institutions for peace and democracy in the region."

©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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