Monday, 28 July, 2003
US tactics fuel Iraqi anger

By Mike Donkin
BBC correspondent in Baghdad

As American forces in Baghdad press harder with
raids to track down Saddam Hussein, they are being warned that they
risk making more enemies for the future.
The death of five civilians here at the hands of an
elite task force hunting members of the former regime has prompted
condemnation from many Iraqis at what they call heavy-handed and
uncaring tactics.
US tactics have been described as 'heavy-handed' and 'hysterical'
|
Task Force 20 raided a villa in the belief, it is
reported, that perhaps Saddam's youngest son Ali or even the former
president himself was sheltering there. They found nothing and made no
arrests, but troops guarding the scene shot and killed five people.
I went to the scene in the wealthy Mansour district
after the task force had left, saying nothing except that they were
fired on first.
Local people told a different story.
When I walked around the villa, owned by a relative of
Saddam, I went through the door that the task force blew up to enter
and was shown smashed windows and ransacked rooms.
 |
Maybe the Americans thought Saddam Hussein was there, but they just got hysterical
|
In the street close by an angry crowd pointed to a pool of blood in
the road, near where one car was shot at as it approached the US
soldiers.
One witness told me: "My neighbours were getting out of their car when they started shooting," he said.
"A woman was hit and a man got out of the car to say
they were doing nothing wrong. So the soldiers fired at him, and at his
brother in the car."
At a central Baghdad hospital a US guard confirmed "several deaths", all of them as a result of gunshot and shrapnel wounds.
Innocent dead
In Mansour people gathered around me. One man in the
crowd expressed his outrage. He said the Americans always shot first
and then they asked the questions.
Troops fired on Iraqi cars that approached them
|
"There was no need for these shootings" another said.
"Maybe the Americans thought Saddam Hussein was there, but they just
got hysterical. They shot innocent civilians in front of our eyes."
Another man told me he was no friend of Saddam Hussein's and he had not liked the former regime.
"But I cannot accept the way the Americans treat us," he said.
"When I see things like this I can understand why people
want to drive them out of our country. If this happens more and more
then I will also join this resistance."
|