Dictator oppressed Iraq for decades

By ROBERT H. REID, Associated Press Writer Sat Dec 30, 7:38 AM ET

Within days of taking power,
Saddam Hussein summoned about 400 top officials and announced he had
uncovered a plot against the ruling party. The conspirators, he said,
were in that very room. As the 42-year-old Saddam coolly puffed on a
cigar, names of the supposed plotters were read out. As each name was
called, secret police led them away. Twenty-two people were executed.
To make sure Iraqis got the word, Saddam videotaped the entire
proceeding and distributed copies across the country.
ADVERTISEMENT

The plot claim was a lie. But in a few terrifying minutes on July 22,
1979, Saddam eliminated his potential rivals, consolidating the power
he wielded until the Americans and their allies drove him from office
a generation later.

Saddam, who was hanged Saturday at age 69, ruled
Iraq with singular ruthlessness. No one was safe. His two sons-in-law
were killed on Saddam's orders after they defected to Jordan but
returned in 1996 after receiving guarantees of safety.

Such brutality kept him in power through war with
Iran, defeat in Kuwait, rebellions by northern Kurds and southern
Shiite Muslims, international sanctions, plots and conspiracies.

In the end, however, brutality was his undoing. Trusting few except
kin, Saddam surrounded himself with sycophants, selected for loyalty
rather than intellect and ability.

And when he was forced out in April 2003, he left a country
impoverished — despite vast oil wealth — and roiling with long
suppressed ethnic and sectarian hatred.

He ended up dragged from a hole by American soldiers in December 2003,
bearded, disheveled and with his arms in the air.

Image and illusion were important tools for Saddam.

He sought to build an image as an all-wise, all-powerful champion of
the Arab nation. His model was the great 12th century warrior Saladin.
He promoted the illusion of a powerful Iraq — with the world's fourth
largest army and weapons of terrible destruction.

Yet it was all hollow. His army crumbled when confronted by the
Americans and their allies in Kuwait in 1991.

And in 2003, his capital fell to a single U.S. brigade task force.

Saddam's weapons of mass destruction proved a bluff to keep the
Iranians, the Syrians, the Israelis — and the Americans — at bay.

He squandered vast sums on opulent palaces — a universe from the harsh
poverty into which he was born on April 28, 1937, in the village of
Ouja near Tikrit. His father died or disappeared before he was born.
His stepfather treated Saddam harshly.

The young Saddam ran away as a boy and lived with his maternal uncle,
Khairallah Talfah, a stridently anti-British, anti-Semitic man whose
daughter, Sajida, would become Saddam's wife.

Under his uncle's influence, Saddam joined the Baath Party, a radical,
secular Arab nationalist organization, at age 20. A year later, he
fled to Egypt after taking part in an attempt to assassinate the
country's ruler, Gen. Abdul-Karim Qassim, and was sentenced to death
in absentia.

Saddam returned four years later after Qassim was overthrown by the
Baath. But the Baath leadership was itself ousted within eight months
and Saddam was imprisoned. He escaped in 1967 and took charge of the
underground Baath party's secret internal security organization.

He swore he would never tolerate the internal dissent that he blamed
for the party losing power.

In July 1968, Baath returned to power under the leadership of Gen.
Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr, who appointed Saddam, his cousin, as his deputy.
Saddam systematically purged key party figures, deported thousands of
Shiites of Iranian origin, supervised the state takeover of Iraq's oil
industry, land reform and modernization.

Al-Bakr decided in 1979 to seek unity with neighboring
Syria, whose president would become al-Bakr's deputy, and Saddam would
be marginalized. Saddam forced his cousin to resign — and then purged
his rivals. Hundreds in the party and army were executed.

Saddam then turned his attention to the country's Shiite majority,
whose clerical leaders had long opposed his secular policies. Saddam's
fears of a Shiite challenge rose after Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini
seized power in Shiite-dominated Iran in 1979.

On Sept. 22, 1980, Iraqi troops crossed the Iranian border, launching
a war that would last eight years, cost hundreds of thousands of lives
on both sides, and devastate Saddam's plans to transform Iraq into a
developed, prosperous country.

After the Iranians counterattacked, Saddam turned to the United
States, France and Britain for weapons, which those countries gladly
sold him to prevent an outright Iranian victory. They turned a blind
eye when Saddam ruthlessly struck against Iraqi Kurds, who lived in
the border area and were dealing secretly with the Iranians.

An estimated 5,000 Kurds died in a chemical weapons attack on the town
of Halabja in March 1988. The United States suggested at the time that
the Iranians might have been responsible.

Only two years after making peace with Iran, Saddam invaded Kuwait,
whose rulers had refused to forgive Iraq's war debt and opposed
increases in oil prices that Iraq desperately needed to recover from
the conflict with Iran.

The
United Nations imposed economic sanctions on Iraq and a U.S.-led
coalition attacked. On Iraqi radio on Jan. 17, 1991, Saddam predicted
"the mother of all battles."

But the Iraqis were driven out of Kuwait. The 1991 war triggered
uprisings among Iraq's Shiites, brutally crushed by Saddam, and the
Kurds, who carved out a self-ruled area under U.S. and British air cover.

In April 1990, Saddam hinted that he had secret super-weapons and
declared: "By God, we will make the fire eat up half of
Israel." During the
Gulf War he fired Scud missiles into Israel, and during the
Palestinian uprising a decade later he paid cash grants to families of
suicide bombers.

The U.N. sanctions remained in effect until his regime collapsed in
2003, devastating Iraq's economy and impoverishing a people who had
been among the most prosperous in the Middle East.

The Sept. 11 terror attack on the U.S. focused attention on Saddam as
a sponsor of terrorism. His refusal to meet U.N. demands for full
disclosure of his illegal weapons program provided a justification for
war.

An American-led force invaded on March 20, 2003. Within three weeks,
Iraq's army had collapsed. Saddam was captured the following December.

As he went on trial in October 2005, his country engulfed in an
anti-American insurgency, Saddam tried to use the proceeding to rail
against the U.S. presence in Iraq in hopes of winning the approval of
history if not an acquittal. But as trial dragged on, his manner
calmed as he realized the inevitability of conviction and the death
sentence that followed.

Kirim email ke