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- <text id=90TT2113>
- <link 93HT0469>
- <link 91TT0272>
- <link 90TT1493>
- <title>
- Aug. 13, 1990: Master Of His Universe
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Aug. 13, 1990 Iraq On The March
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 23
- COVER STORIES
- Master of His Universe
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Iraq's dictator seems capable of doing anything to get his way
- </p>
- <p>By Otto Friedrich--Reported by Dan Goodgame/Washington and
- William Mader/London
- </p>
- <p> "Nebuchadnezzar was driven from men, and did eat grass as
- oxen..."
- </p>
- <p>-- The Book of Daniel 4:33
- </p>
- <p> What kind of a man would cold-bloodedly gobble up a
- neighboring country? What kind of a man would try to
- assassinate a Prime Minister? What kind of a man gasses
- undefended villages or executes his closest colleagues? What
- kind of a man, in short, is Iraq's President-for-Life Saddam
- Hussein?
- </p>
- <p> The heir, it would seem, of the fierce and bloodthirsty
- Mesopotamian kings who once ruled the civilized world. Many of
- those ancient potentates met terrible ends--when they made
- the mistake of relaxing their grip for an instant. Saddam is
- determined not to repeat their fate.
- </p>
- <p> When Israeli intelligence agents gave an anonymous sample
- of Saddam's handwriting to a leading graphologist recently, the
- analyst said the writer suffered from severe megalomania with
- symptoms of paranoia. Graphology is even less of a science than
- long-distance psychiatry, but there is other evidence besides
- the loops and whorls of script. Saddam had himself photographed
- not long ago in a replica of the war chariot of Nebuchadnezzar,
- the Babylonian king whom Saddam apparently reveres as his hero.
- Despite a bout of insanity, which is recounted in The Book of
- Daniel, Nebuchadnezzar made his name in history by destroying
- Jerusalem in 587 B.C. and driving its inhabitants into 70 years
- of captivity. It is fair warning.
- </p>
- <p> Like those forebears, Saddam is by no means crazy. Rather,
- he is a man willing to do almost anything to get what he wants--and he wants to dominate the Middle East much as
- Nebuchadnezzar once did. "He is an extremely shrewd,
- cold-blooded, clever thug," says a senior British diplomat who
- has dealt with him. "Human life means nothing to him." He plays
- the complex game of Middle East politics by the bareknuckle
- rules of the region. Says another diplomat: "He does what he
- thinks is expedient. He is not driven by ideology or whim. He
- coldly calculates every move. He is simply a brutal and very
- clever pragmatist." Adds TIME correspondent Dan Goodgame: "On
- meeting him, a visitor is first struck by his eyes, crackling
- with alertness and at the same time cold and remorseless as
- snake eyes on the sides of dice. They are the eyes of a
- killer."
- </p>
- <p> The origins of Saddam's killer instinct go back to his roots
- in Tikrit, 100 miles north of Baghdad. Born in 1937 the son of
- peasants, he was orphaned at the age of nine months and raised
- by an uncle, an army officer named Khairallah Talfah, who hated
- Britain's domination of Iraq's puppet monarchy. At his knee,
- the boy learned the ways of intrigue and sneak attack, until
- Talfah joined in an abortive anti-British coup in 1941 and was
- imprisoned. Saddam did not attend school until the age of nine
- and later, when he applied for admission to the elite Baghdad
- Military Academy, he was rejected for poor grades. It was a
- devastating blow, instilling, say Israeli analysts, an obsession
- with the use of military force. Though Saddam now likes to
- parade around in self-designed military uniforms, it was only
- after he came to power that he could make himself a full
- general.
- </p>
- <p> The nearest he ever got to combat was assassination. As a
- student, he had joined the Baath Party, an underground
- anti-Western, pan-Arab socialist movement. The party put him
- on a team assigned to murder Iraq's military ruler, Abdul Karim
- Kassem. Saddam and his confederates sprayed Kassem's station
- wagon with machine-gun fire as it sped through downtown
- Baghdad, but they missed their target. Although bodyguards
- killed several of the assailants, Saddam escaped with a bullet
- in his left leg. In the glorified words of his own hagiography--the truth is less dramatic--he carved out the bullet
- himself with a razor dipped in iodine, then disguised himself
- as a Bedouin tribesman, swam across the Tigris River, stole a
- donkey and fled across the desert to Syria. He was captured and
- jailed, but supposedly word of his adventures reached Egypt's
- President Gamal Abdel Nasser, who was then a charismatic
- exponent of pan-Arabism. Nasser got Saddam transferred to Cairo,
- and became another hero.
- </p>
- <p> At 25, Saddam began studying law, but his heart was in other
- things. According to one anecdote, Saddam was exasperated when
- his Cairo classmates sat around in cafes and debated the fine
- points of local politics. "Why argue?" Saddam shouted. "Why
- don't you just take out a gun and shoot him?"
- </p>
- <p> Saddam returned to Baghdad in 1963 and started organizing
- a militia for the Baath Party, which finally succeeded in
- grabbing power permanently in 1968. Under the nominal
- leadership of General Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr, the man who held
- the real control was his relative Saddam Hussein. Keeping
- things in the family, Saddam married another relative, Sajida
- Talfah, the daughter of the officer who had raised him.
- </p>
- <p> Al-Bakr retired in 1979, and that left Saddam completely in
- charge. He celebrated by ordering the execution of 21 Cabinet
- members, including one of his closest comrades, on dubious
- charges of treason. "He who is closest to me is farthest from
- me when he does wrong," said Saddam.
- </p>
- <p> According to a British diplomat, on other occasions Saddam
- took a band of Cabinet ministers and aides down to Baghdad's
- central prison to serve as the firing squad for a number of
- political prisoners. "It was to ensure loyalty through common
- guilt," says the British official. It also reminds his
- colleagues what their own destiny might be. Amnesty
- International has estimated the number of executions in Iraq
- at hundreds a year, and the secret police are everywhere.
- Torture is commonplace. It is a crime to own a typewriter
- without police permission. It is death to speak against the
- "Father-Leader." Says a Western official: "Everyone knows that
- no one is safe."
- </p>
- <p> Yet in 1980 Saddam nearly brought his regime to ruin when
- he attacked Iran. He had once given refuge to the Ayatullah
- Khomeini, then, under pressure from the Shah, expelled him. Not
- only did Saddam want disputed territory, but he was also
- provoked when Khomeini began calling for the overthrow of
- Saddam's "blasphemous" regime. He is a Sunni Muslim, though
- most Iraqis belong to the rival Shi`ite branch, as did Khomeini.
- Saddam responded by invading, confident that his powerful,
- Soviet-equipped army could easily smash the Ayatullah's ragtag
- militia, but the Iranians fought back. When the going got
- especially rough, Saddam turned to poison gas, a horror weapon
- outlawed after World War I.
- </p>
- <p> Not so much popular as feared at home, he is equally
- ruthless in preserving his power. He is omnipresent, his face,
- sometimes several feet high, adorning every city block. His
- picture hangs in every office, every shop, even most private
- homes, lest the dreaded secret police pay a call. Those who
- don't conform pay. A senior general once warned him, according
- to an Iraqi informant, that an attack he had ordered would lead
- to very high casualties. Saddam invited the general into the
- next room to discuss the matter. After the door closed behind
- them, a shot rang out. Saddam returned alone, stuffing his
- pistol into his holster.
- </p>
- <p> While fighting the Iranians, Saddam was also waging war
- against the rebellious Kurds, who make up about 19% of Iraq's
- population. There too he relied on poison gas, not against
- invading soldiers but against civilians, women and children.
- It took eight years for the gulf war to end in a stalemate,
- with a loss of an estimated 75,000 to 150,000 Iraqi lives and
- the country's economy in ruins. To rebuild from the wreckage,
- Saddam needed more oil revenues, and when Kuwait interfered
- with his plans, he reached--as ever--for his pistol.
- </p>
- <p> What distinguishes Saddam from the rulers of other lands is
- that he is not content merely to "be" President. He has a
- vision--some would say a delusion--of grandeur for himself
- and for Iraq, but the only ways he knows to pursue the dream
- are to kill and bully and take.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-