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Pendleton’s Marines in Action--Abandoned Embassy ‘Is Ours’

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At 4:20 p.m. Wednesday, Camp Pendleton’s Team Tiger was ready. Humvee engines were idling. Gunners checked their ammunition. And squad leaders checked their maps, plotting the route of attack on the abandoned U.S. Embassy.

In Sgt. Shawn Blackie’s unit, Lance Cpl. Brandley Lewis, 19, was at the wheel of the Humvee. Sitting on top were Lance Cpl. Rueben Cuevas, 20, of Pasadena, manning the .50-caliber gun, and Cpl. William Simone, 21, with his M-16 rifle.

“How do I feel about this mission?” Blackie, of Altoona, Pa., asked. “This is a good one. The embassy is ours.”

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At 4:22, the radio crackled to life, informing the Marines that a U.N. peacekeeping truck had been fired on by snipers earlier in the day and that the “technicals”--small armed bands on pickups--had been spotted near the embassy.

“If you see a ‘technical,’ ” the sergeant told his troops, “and they’re driving away, don’t kill them. But if they’re pointing at you, take them out.”

Then, at 4:28, a voice over the radio said, “Let’s do it.”

The convoy roared four miles through the streets, passing donkeys and hundreds of waving Somalis, until it arrived at the compound. Almost 100 soldiers rushed inside, checking every room in the empty buildings.

At 5 p.m., the team leader was on the radio to headquarters.

“We’re inside the chancery compound,” he said. “Being assaulted. By reporters.”

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