ISIS terrorists used children as props in their latest sick execution video, having the youngsters lead eight Shiite men to their doom in a Syrian field.

The blindfolded victims — dressed in now-tragically recognizable orange jumpsuits — had their hands bound behind their backs as they were led by the children. Each boy handed off the prisoner he was leading to adult jihadis, who finished the slaughter by forcing the victims to kneel and then beheading them with knives, the video shows.

The savage terror group has filmed most of its executions and used them as sick propaganda.

One of the killers in the latest video speaks to the camera and labels the victims “impure infidels,” the Daily Mail reported.

“Our swords will soon, God willing, reach the Nusairis and their allies like Bashar and his party,” the fighter says, referring to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, using the epithet “Nusairi” to insult his sect of Islam.

In an interview with “60 Minutes” that aired Sunday night, Assad said he enjoys overwhelming support from the Syrian people even though his country is wracked by civil war.

He bristled at suggestions that he is nothing more than a dynastic ruler, handed the reins of power by dad Hafez al-Assad, president of Syria from 1971 to 2000. Assad tried to compare his dad and himself to Presidents George H.W. and George W. Bush.

“No, what matters for us is, do the Syrians support these two presidents. It doesn’t matter if they are father and son,” he said.

“We don’t say W. — George W. Bush — is the son of George Bush. It’s different. He’s president; I’m president. He has support from that generation; I have support from this generation now.”

Assad said he’ll step down someday — when he determines that he has lost the support of the Syrian people.

“When I don’t have the public support. When I don’t represent the Syrian interests and values,” he said.

“I sense. I feel. I’m in contact with them. I’m a human.

“How, how can a human make that expectation of the population?” Assad said.

“I mean, the war was very important for this support. I mean, they could have, if they don’t support you, they could have [gone] and support[ed] the other side. They didn’t. Why? That’s very clear. That’s very concrete,” he said.