Unfortunate that a 17-year old, the future generation of Iraq, could hold such thoughts.Invaders Find No Easy Ride in Southern Iraq
Sun March 23, 2003 09:35 AM ET
By Rosalind Russell
SOUTH OF BASRA, Iraq (Reuters) - As the convoy of British tanks and trucks rolled by, the Iraqi boys on the side of the road were all smiles and waves.
But once it had passed, leaving a trail of dust and grit in its wake, their smiles turned to scowls. "We don't want them here," said 17-years-old Fouad, looking angrily up at the plumes of gray smoke rising from the embattled southern city of Basra, under attack from U.S. and British forces for more than two days.
He pulled a piece of paper from the waistband of his trousers. Unfolding it, he held up a picture of Saddam Hussein.
"Saddam is our leader. Saddam is good," he said defiantly, looking again at his well-worn picture showing the Iraqi leader with a benign smile, sitting on a majestic throne.
British and U.S. ground troops invaded southern Iraq under cover of darkness on Thursday, pushing ahead to the outskirts of Basra on the banks of the Tigris river.
The city was the focus of an uprising following the 1991 Gulf War, brutally extinguished by Saddam. But if the invading forces were expecting an easy ride in the southern Shi'ite heartland, they may now be thinking again.
Pockets of resistance have sprung up in areas supposedly under U.S. or British control, notably the port town of Umm Qasr, still not secured nearly three days after the invasion.
At an abandoned Iraqi military complex 25 km (15 miles) south of Basra, relaxed British soldiers were on patrol on Sunday morning.
"It was an Iraqi training camp. We've cleared all the buildings, looked for booby traps, it's secured," said a young corporal.
But by early afternoon, after two Iraqi soldiers were spotted on waste ground nearby, three tanks sped back from the Basra frontline. Soldiers ran to take up positions, their guns trained in every direction.
In the desert scrub on either side of the main Basra road, U.S. Super Cobra helicopters have been deployed to swoop on pockets of resistance in territory ground troops raced through early on Friday.
Residents fleeing Basra said the Iraqi military had taken the battle into the city.
"There is fighting in the center, on the streets. It is terrible," said Hussein, a 24-year-old engineer who works for the state-run southern oil company.
Hussein said he escaped from the city on Saturday with his wife and young son. More civilians streamed out of Basra on Sunday, in trucks and battered cars crammed full with household belongings. The sound of machinegun and artillery fire echoed behind them.
"We don't want Americans here. This is Iraq," said Hussein.
I think this fits into a broader context of the fierce Iraqi resistance we're seeing- a hatred of foreign invaders. Like Hussein (not Saddam said), "this is Iraq". I can't think of any conceivable reason why the conscripts are fighting so hard, and not surrendering en masse, other than this.
Now that this war is started, I can only hope that Baghdad falls quickly, without disasters. Iraq's future is on the razors edge, IMO.