(major World Leaders) — Saddam Hussein

Upon officially taking power, Saddam immediately solidified his control through a televised purge of his own party, signaling that his regime would be maintained through absolute loyalty and terror. He established a cult of personality, with his image appearing on every street corner and currency note. To maintain order in a diverse nation of Sunnis, Shias, and Kurds, he relied on a brutal security apparatus that utilized torture, disappearances, and mass executions. Decades of Conflict

Driven by debt and a desire for oil dominance, Saddam invaded Kuwait, leading to the Persian Gulf War. A US-led coalition swiftly expelled his forces, but Saddam remained in power, facing a decade of crippling international sanctions that devastated the Iraqi population while he continued to build lavish palaces. Fall and Legacy Saddam Hussein (Major World Leaders)

Saddam Hussein remains a deeply polarizing figure. While some in the Arab world once saw him as a symbol of defiance against Western interference, his primary legacy is one of devastation. His reign left Iraq fractured by sectarianism, haunted by mass graves, and struggling to find stability in the vacuum left by his departure. Decades of Conflict Driven by debt and a

The turning point came with the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq, justified by allegations—later proven largely false—that Saddam possessed weapons of mass destruction and had ties to Al-Qaeda. His regime collapsed quickly; he was captured in a "spider hole" near Tikrit in December 2003. After a trial by an Iraqi tribunal for crimes against humanity, he was executed in 2006. While some in the Arab world once saw

Fearing the spread of the Islamic Revolution, Saddam launched a bloody eight-year war against Iran. The conflict resulted in over a million deaths and saw the Iraqi regime use chemical weapons against both Iranian soldiers and its own Kurdish citizens (notably in the Halabja massacre).