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US teen runs off to Iraq to see 'struggle between good and evil'
(AP)
Updated: 2005-12-30 15:15

"And I'm like, 'Well, I should probably be going.' It was not a safe place. The way they were looking at me kind of freaked me out," he said.

It was mid-afternoon Tuesday, after his second night in Baghdad, that he sought out editors at The Associated Press and announced he was in Iraq to do research and humanitarian work. AP staffers had never seen an unaccompanied American teenager walk into their war zone office.

"I would have been less surprised if little green men had walked in," said editor Patrick Quinn.

Wearing a blue long-sleeve shirt in addition to his jeans and sneakers, Hassan appeared eager and outgoing but slightly sheepish about his situation.

The AP quickly called the U.S. embassy.

Embassy officials had been on the lookout for Hassan, at the request of his parents, who still weren't sure exactly where he was. One U.S. military officer said he was shocked the teen was still alive. The 101st Airborne lieutenant who picked him up from the hotel said it was the wildest story he'd ever heard.

Most of Hassan's wild tale could not be corroborated, but his larger story arc was in line with details provided by friends and family members back home.

Dangerous and dramatic, Hassan said his trip has also been educational. He interviewed Christians in south Lebanon and had tea with Kuwaitis under a tent in the middle of a desert. He said he spoke with U.S. soldiers guarding his Baghdad hotel who told him they were treated better by Sunni Arabs _ the minority population that enjoyed a high standing under Saddam Hussein and are now thought to fuel the insurgency _ than by the majority Shiites.

Aside from the research he wanted to accomplish, Hassan also wrote an essay saying he wanted to volunteer with the Red Cross in Iraq. He said he wrote half the essay in the United States, half in Kuwait, then e-mailed it to his teachers on December 15 while in the Kuwait City airport.
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