BAGHDAD, 13 November 2003 — If Washington doubts there is Iraqi public support for guerrillas killing its troops, it should consider the teenagers who happily watched American blood spill yesterday.
After a roadside bomb ripped through a military vehicle and wounded two soldiers, Iraqi boys rushed out of their homes to survey the damage.
“This is good. If they ask me, I will join the resistance. The Americans have to die,” said Ali Qais, 15. “They are just here to steal our oil.” The US administration has long dismissed the guerrillas as isolated “terrorists” who are Saddam Hussein loyalists or foreign Islamic militants.
But the scene in the Sarafiya district of Baghdad suggests they are winning the sympathy of Iraqis, whose joy at Saddam’s fall has been overshadowed by anti-American rage.
Teenage boys were irritated to hear that two American soldiers were just wounded, not killed.
“I saw them pushing their hands onto one of the Americans’ chest. They must have died. One soldier’s friend was crying,” said Abdullah Oman, 18.
His fury has been fueled by what he says is an American desire to humiliate all Iraqis.
He even believes that US troops plant the bombs themselves, risking American lives to terrify and kill Iraqis.
“They are watching us die and laughing. They humiliate us. They handcuffed me and arrested me in front of my parents late one night because I stood on my house porch after curfew,” he said.
Guerrillas have killed 155 American soldiers since US President George W. Bush declared major combat over on May 1.
In the months after the war, Iraqis voiced frustration with the American failure to crack down on looters and restore basic services.
Now talk has turned increasingly violent, especially among teenagers. They have watched American soldiers arrest their fathers and body search their mothers during intrusive raids.
Iraqis are angrier and guerrillas are carrying out more spectacular attacks such as suicide bombings and mortar strikes on the main US compound in Saddam’s former palace.
Shortly after yesterday’s bombing teenagers in Sarafiya picked up leaflets from a resistance group.
“Patience, patience Baghdad. The occupation army will be destroyed,” the leaflets said.
Residents of the working-class area watched as a US soldier poured water and sand over the pools of blood from his comrades. “I want to join these Iraqi fighters. I want to hit the Americans, the infidels,” said Ali Ahmed, 10.