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Saddam:
The Secret Life
By Con Coughlin. Pan MacMillan. 350pp. $25
Reviewer
::
David Sibley
Are
a few bits of human viscera amid a pile of rubble in Baghdad whats
left of Saddam Hussein? If not, where is the Iraqi dictator? Has
he taken the Osama bin Laden option and disappeared into the shadows,
becoming but a rumour since the might of the Coalition destroyed
his dictatorship in 27 days?
This
book wont tell you the answer. But it provides a chilling
insight into the nature and personality of one of the worlds
most gruesome tyrants and what motivated him since he emerged from
a poverty-stricken childhood outside the town of Tikrit, north of
Baghdad, on the Tigris River.
Con
Coughlin, the executive editor of the British Sunday Telegraph,
has reported extensively on the Middle East during his career, including
frontline reporting in Gulf War I. In this exhaustive biography
of Saddam, carefully footnoted with sources clearly attributed,
he pulls no punches in exploring an incredible life of violence
and manipulation.
What
is clear is that survival at all costs is the principle by which
Saddam clawed his way to the top of the Baath Party.
Coughlin has done his best to discern the truth behind the veil
of lies and propaganda Saddam used as part of his cult of personality.
Saddams
actual birth date is not known, nor is it known whether he was illegitimate.
His mother seems to have a shadowy background and it is suggested
she was a prostitute. In any case, Saddam appears to have had an
unhappy childhood with an abusive stepfather and a neglectful mother.
His
uncle Khairallah Tulfah, an Iraqi army officer who was a big fan
of Adolf Hitler, became Saddams mentor and arranged for him
to leave Tikrit for Baghdad where the young tough became involved
in the Baath Party, a small quasi-socialist and pan-Arabist
party.
Saddams
story is also the bloodstained history of modern Iraq. How the Baath
seized control from the military governments which had ruled Iraq
after the monarchys overthrow in 1958 is a sickening but compelling
story of a determined group of revolutionaries who stopped at nothing
to achieve their goal of a socialist government that would unite
all Arabs across the Middle East. Saddam was just one of a murderous
bunch of thugs but with one essential difference he outlasted
them all.
Along
the way, he used his family as his henchmen with a coterie of half-brothers
and cousins prominent in his rule. Coughlin shows how they were
able to bypass the Western economic sanctions after Gulf War I,
earning millions of dollars by trafficking oil and humanitarian
supplies while millions of Iraqi starved and went without medical
assistance.
Saddam
survived Gulf War I because the West was not prepared to overthrow
him. This may have given him the false confidence that he could
out-bluff the second George Bush he had come up against. Saddams
failure was to understand how September 11 had changed the equation.
Coughlin
makes the telling point that the mere possibility Saddam could have
weapons of mass destruction and could play a part in future attacks
against the United States was the driver behind the American determination
to topple him.
Interestingly,
he outlines the known intelligence on links between Saddam and Osama
bin Laden. Although sketchy and inconclusive, it raises alarm bells.
Whether
Saddam is dead or not, Coughlins study of his life is worth
reading for the insights into the fear and terror of Saddams
rule.
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