r1 O n ( i Grenada mission accomplished tisiae to get out Last week's invasion of Grenada by the United States may turn cut to be a long, drawn cut sS.Vs. When troops landed en the island last week, first reports indicted light resistance and government cCeiaLs said American forces raight be with drawn in one cr tv.-o dsys. As the week were en, reports of heavier fighting came from military and administration clZcials and the projected length of the stay of VS. for ces was stretched to a week to 10 days. Now President Her man may be given until Christmas to pall the American occupation force cIT the Carribcan island because of a war powers resolu tion passed Tuesday by the llsuse. A Senate vote, expected this week, prob ably will approve the resolution. - While it is a positive" now for Con gress to set a limit on how long Ameri can troops can stay in Grenada, the fct remains that they could be there far two more months. This is disturbing. Why should Amer ican servicemen remain on an bland where fghiing has ceased and where there is no lender any darker to the Americans that were rescued in the invasion? How about a need for the United States (and the Herman administra tion) to continue to assert itself as the world's hope against communism? That would be a coed reason, except - that our military exercise in Grenada and our continued presence there will not end the threat of communism in the world or deter future communist agression.. Are we needed there to ensure that a new democratic government is im- pigmented and that order is restored j : acwi (&Fesia(fla Mvqqmm EntaSaEie It's none of my business, but I dont think Keshan should 'have invaded Grenada. He has my sympathy. It must have been very frustrating this past month when hardly anyone wanted to invade Russia or Syria. So I can see why he wanted to kick Grenada around. But if truth be told, there's not much enthu siasm on my block for declaring war on Grenada either. The one person for it was Captain Haskell, U.S. Army Flying Corps (retired), who lives at the corner. "By jingo, we havent won a war in 37 years and this is our chance," he said happily at our Tuesday night Tupperware party. "But I do wish we'd warmed up on Nauru first." Old lira, CadwaHer, who lives alone, admitted she'd been nervous abcutthe Grenada threat for years. "After a3, it's 21 miles long, has a population of 1C3.C0D known Communists and lias only 20Q miles from our shores," she said. But she was against the invasion. 1 think," she said, Leaking up from the tea cosy she was tatting, "we should have nuked them." It was my dear wife, Gyada, how ever, who summed up the feeling of the rest cf us. "I never met a Grenadian I CajxwmH CwtJt aX .m cflC33 Gagged. In all due modesty I must concede that it was I who first suggested we launch an all-out assault cn lied China pie on our block have come to lock upon the Chinese in recent years as peace-loving agrarian reformers who make baskets and hydroelectric pro jects and love having their pictures wl w41 A ua4 Imp! tJ . That was before I read them a recent' Associated Press dispatch from China reporting that any del arrested within the confines cf Beiiin? or its suburbs would be executed without trial "Do you realise that there are an estimated 1C0.CC3 dogs in Bering who will be exterminated under this bar barous program cf canicide and," I said, addressing this last remark to eld lira. Cad waller who has a missratle, y?jp2 cdsx stcimfcl fPkc3y cocker Caza-ed ca Fags- 5 cn the island? Not if we truly believe in self-determination - and -respect the rights of others to solve their own pro j What about a prolonged period cf patting ourselves on the back fof "sav ing" the people cf Grenada from the Cuban invasion force entrenched on the island? Thb seems like the most likely reason though it is tinged by the fact that we didnt know for sure that there was a Cuban invasion force until we attacked the island. With this sort of reasoning, we could intervene any where in the world on the slightest suspicion that we may find something that justifies our action. Actually, there are no good reasons for American troops to be in Grenada. If their mission was to protect Araeri-. can lives, as President Esagan has said, then the legitimate purpose for their intervention has been served and they should be pulled out The Essgan administration has not totally convinced the American public that the United States was justified in its invasion cf Grenada. Anytime men must die and their families must suffer, the Questions that should be asked are: Why did it happen and was it really worth it? These questions remain to be answered. The Eeagan administration has tried to present a convincing argument as to why the United States had to step in. Some of it has been hard to swallow. But if our main mission cf saving American lives has been accomplished, it is time to pack up and get out Presi dent -Reagan should not wait until Christmas to give that present to the American people. Terry L. Ilyland I J L