July 22nd, 2003.

A quiet residential street in Mosul, Iraq.

Behind the walls of an ordinaryl looking house, two of the most wanted men in the world are [music] about to face their final moments.

Uday and Kus Hussein, sons of the deposed dictator Saddam Hussein, have been on the run for 108 days.

In less than 24 hours, the most intense firefight of the Iraq war will unfold, and the Hussein dynasty will suffer a blow from which it will never recover.

The summer heat in Mosul is suffocating, reaching well over 100° F.

Inside the residence owned by Nawaf al- Zidan, a cousin of one of Saddam Hussein’s bodyguards, four men move quietly through the rooms.

U Hussein, 39 years old, walks with a pronounced limp.

the result of an attack attempt years earlier that left him with severe injuries.

His younger brother, Kus, 37, maintains a more composed demeanor, still holding on to the military discipline that defined his role as head of the Republican Guard.

With them are Kusay’s 14-year-old son, Mustafa, and a bodyguard named Abdul Samed.

The group has been moving between safe houses since Baghdad fell to American forces on April 9th.

What was once unimaginable has become reality.

The regime that ruled Iraq with absolute power for over two decades has crumbled in a matter of weeks.

The house at 108 Felaston Street is modest by the standards these men once knew.

No palatial rooms, no golden fixtures, no servants attending to their every need, just four walls and the constant awareness that coalition forces are searching for them relentlessly.

The US military has placed a $15 million bounty on Uday’s head and another 15 million on Kusay’s.

It’s the same amount offered for their father.

Uday spends much of the morning in visible discomfort.

The injuries from the 1996 attack attempt have never fully healed.

He requires a cane to walk and suffers from chronic pain that once demanded regular medication.

Now in hiding, access to proper medical care is impossible.

His temperament, always volatile, has become even more unpredictable under the stress of being hunted.

Kusai, by contrast, maintains his characteristic silence.

Throughout his life, he operated in his father’s shadow, managing the brutal apparatus of state security, while his older brother grabbed headlines with his excesses.

Where Uday courted attention, Kus cultivated mystery.

Where Uday was impulsive, Kusay was calculating.

These differences have defined their relationship for decades, and they remain evident even now in these [music] desperate circumstances.

The brothers know their options are diminishing by the day.

Iraq’s new reality has turned former allies into potential informants.

Tribal loyalties that once seemed unbreakable are tested daily by the promise of American money and the threat of American power.

Trust has become the scarcest commodity in post invasion Iraq.

By midday, the temperature inside the house has become almost unbearable.

There is no air conditioning, and opening windows risks drawing attention.

The men take turns watching the street through carefully positioned gaps [music] and curtains.

They see children playing, women carrying groceries, men gathering in small groups to talk.

All the rhythms of ordinary life continue while they remain trapped inside waiting.

The owner of the house, Nawaf al- Zidon, has been providing updates about coalition movements in the area.

American patrols have been increasing throughout Mosul.

The city, once considered relatively stable compared to Baghdad or Fallujah, has seen growing military presence.

Checkpoints appear and disappear.

Raids happen at all hours.

The net is tightening, though whether it will close around this particular house remains unknown.

For the Hussein brothers, these months on the run have been a brutal education in survival.

They have learned to live without the luxuries that once defined their existence.

No more imported cars, no more private jets, no more palaces with hundreds of rooms, no more parties that lasted for days.

The contrast between their past and present could not be more stark.

U in particular struggles with this new reality.

His entire life was built around excess and indulgence.

He owned over 1,200 luxury vehicles at one point.

He had access to anything he wanted whenever he wanted it.

Now he cannot even leave the house without risking capture or death.

The psychological toll is evident in his deteriorating mood and increasingly erratic behavior.

The physical toll on Uday is equally severe.

The 1996 attack left him with injuries that require ongoing medical attention.

Bullets had struck him multiple times as he drove through Baghdad.

One entered near his spine, causing permanent nerve damage.

Another shattered bones in his leg.

He survived, but the recovery was long and incomplete.

He walks with a cane now, and the pain is constant.

Without proper medication, which is impossible to obtain in his current circumstances, he suffers daily.

Kus watches his older brother’s decline with an unreadable expression.

The two have never been close despite being born into the same family of absolute power.

Their father Saddam always seemed to favor Kusay for succession.

Recognizing that Uday’s volatility made him unsuitable for leadership.

This created a dynamic of competition and resentment that never fully resolved itself.

Yet here they are together in hiding, dependent on each other for survival.

Kusay’s military training and discipline complement U’s stubborn refusal to surrender.

Between them, they represent different aspects of their father’s regime.

Uday is the chaos and cruelty that terrorized individuals.

Cus is the systematic oppression that controlled the masses.

Both are responsible for immense suffering, though in different ways.

As the afternoon stretches on, the household settles into an uneasy routine.

Food is prepared and eaten.

Conversations happen in low voices.

Young Mustafa, Kusai’s son, remains remarkably composed for a teenager living under such circumstances.

He has inherited his father’s stoic nature, showing little of the fear that must be coursing through him.

Uday’s mood darkens as the day progresses.

He was once the heir apparent to his father’s regime.

The eldest son groomed for power.

He drove expensive cars through Baghdad streets, acted with complete impunity, and inspired fear throughout the country.

Now he is reduced to hiding in a stranger’s house, dependent on the loyalty of men who might betray him at any moment for a fortune in American dollars.

His past is catching up to him in ways that go beyond the immediate military threat.

Stories of his behavior during the regime, years [music] have spread widely since the invasion.

tales of violence, of brutal treatment toward athletes who disappointed him, of acting on impulse without regard for consequences.

Whether all these stories are accurate is almost irrelevant.

Now, they have created a portrait of a man whom many Iraqis will not mourn.

The stories are numerous and disturbing.

Athletes who failed to perform up to expectations reportedly faced severe consequences.

Some were imprisoned, others were physically harmed.

The Iraqi national football team, once a source of pride, became a source of fear under UDE’s control as head of the Iraqi Olympic Committee.

Players performed not just for victory, but for their own safety.

Beyond sports, UD’s behavior extended into every aspect of Iraqi society that caught his attention.

He ran newspapers that served as propaganda outlets.

He commanded militias that operated outside normal military chains of command.

He moved through Baghdad like a force of nature, accountable to no one except occasionally his father.

And even that accountability was limited.

His personal life was equally chaotic.

Multiple marriages and relationships, all marked by his inability to accept any form of limitation or resistance.

He collected cars, weapons, and anything else that struck his fancy.

His palaces were filled with stolen art and looted treasures.

He lived as if consequences did not exist because for most of his life they did not.

Kusi’s reputation is different but no less dark.

As commander of the Republican Guard and the Special Republican Guard, he oversaw some of the regime’s most severe crackdowns.

He managed the suppression of uprisings.

He coordinated responses to perceived threats.

He did this with efficiency and without the erratic behavior that characterized his brother.

This made him more dangerous in some ways because his cruelty was systematic rather than spontaneous.

Where Uday was the face of random violence, Kusay was the architect of organized oppression.

He understood intelligence networks, security operations, and how to maintain control through fear and surveillance.

Under his leadership, the Special Republican Guard became one of the most effective and feared units in Iraq.

They protected the regime, eliminated threats, and ensured that disscent was crushed before it could spread.

Kusai also controlled access to his father.

He managed Saddam’s security, determined who could meet with the president, and filtered information that reached the top of the regime.

This made him extraordinarily powerful, perhaps more powerful than his official title suggested.

He was not just a military commander, but a gatekeeper to the center of Iraqi power.

His personal life was far more controlled than his brothers.

He married and had children, maintaining a more traditional family structure.

He did not indulge in the public displays of excess that characterized Udai.

He preferred to work behind the scenes to be the efficient operator rather than the attention-seeking personality.

This difference in temperament created friction between the brothers, but also made Kusay the more trusted son in their father’s eyes.

The regime’s internal dynamics were complex and often brutal.

Saddam played his sons against each other at times, using their rivalry to maintain his own control.

He recognized U’s instability, but also found uses for his son’s willingness to act without hesitation.

He valued Kusay’s competence, but also understood that too much power concentrated in one person could become a threat.

The balance between the brothers served Saddam’s interests, even if it created tension within the family.

The brothers rarely speak directly about their situation.

Perhaps there is nothing left to say.

They have spent their entire lives in a bubble of privilege and power, insulated from the consequences that ordinary Iraqis face [music] daily under their father’s rule.

Now that bubble has burst, and the world outside is hostile in ways they never had to contemplate before.

Around 400 p p.

m.

Nawaf al- Zidon receives troubling news.

American forces have been asking questions in the neighborhood.

Nothing specific yet, but the inquiries are getting closer.

This is how it has gone in other cities.

Informants provide tips.

Soldiers investigate.

Raids follow.

The timeline between suspicion and action can be remarkably short.

A decision point arrives.

Should they leave now? Attempt to find another safe house before darkness falls? or should they stay? Gambling that the Americans don’t have concrete intelligence about this specific location.

Moving in daylight increases the risk of being spotted, but staying means potentially being trapped if soldiers do arrive.

Kus makes the decision they will stay.

Moving now feels more dangerous than remaining in place.

The house is well positioned with thick walls and limited access points.

If the worst happens, they can defend themselves for a time.

Neither brother articulates the logical conclusion of that thought, but it hangs in the air unspoken.

If American forces come in strength, there will be no escape.

As evening approaches, the heat finally begins to break.

The house cools slightly, though the tension does not.

Weapons are checked and rechecked.

Each man has an AK-47 rifle.

There are additional magazines of ammunition, several hand grenades, an RPG launcher.

If this house becomes a battlefield, they will not go quietly.

The bodyguard, Abdul Samad, takes the first watch at the window.

He is a professional trained in the elite units that protected the regime’s leadership for years.

He knows how Americans conduct operations.

He has studied their tactics, their equipment, their procedures.

If soldiers come, he will see them before they reach the door.

U lies down in one of the back rooms, his leg causing him visible pain.

The limp has worsened over the years since the attack.

The bullets that struck him damaged nerves and bone in ways that surgery could only partially address.

Some whisper that he never fully recovered psychologically either, that the experience of vulnerability changed something fundamental in him.

Kus sits with his son speaking in low tones.

What does a father say to his teenage boy in such circumstances? Does he offer reassurance that everything will work out? Does he prepare him for the possibility that tomorrow will not come? Does he express regret for the life of a danger and privilege that led to this moment? These conversations, if they happen, leave no record.

Nightfalls over Mosul.

The city continues its rhythms.

Calls to prayer echo from mosques.

Generators hum to life as electricity from the damaged grid flickers and fails.

The smell of cooking food drifts through streets.

Somewhere in the darkness, American forces are planning their next moves, processing intelligence, preparing for raids that will happen in the hours ahead.

Inside the house on Fastston Street, the four fugitives settle in for what they assume will be another night of waiting.

They have survived 108 days since Baghdad fell.

Each day has brought new challenges, new narrow escapes, new betrayals, but they have endured.

Perhaps they allow themselves to believe they can endure longer still.

This belief will not survive the morning.

The betrayal that seals the Hussein brothers fate happens not in darkness but in daylight.

Nawaf al- Zidon, the owner of the house who has sheltered them, makes a decision that will change everything.

The reasons are never entirely clear.

Perhaps the weight of hosting such dangerous fugitives becomes too much.

Perhaps the promise of $30 million outweighs any sense of loyalty or fear of reprisal.

Perhaps he simply realizes that harboring the Hussein brothers is a death sentence if Americans discover his role without his cooperation.

Whatever his motivation, Al Zidan makes contact with coalition forces through an intermediary named Shik Zidan Khalif.

The information he provides is specific and actionable, not rumors or vague suspicions, but exact details.

the address, the number of men inside, their weapons, their positions.

The process of getting this information to the right people takes hours, but moves with surprising efficiency.

Shik Khalif contacts local coalition authorities.

They verify his credibility and the quality of his information.

Within the command structure, the intelligence moves upward rapidly.

This is exactly the kind of actionable intelligence that has been so difficult to obtain since the invasion.

The $30 million reward has been dangling before potential informants for months.

It represents generational wealth in Iraq, enough money to change a family’s fortune forever.

But the risk of providing such information is enormous.

The Hussein family has a long memory and a history of brutal reprisals.

Anyone who betrays them knows they are marking themselves and possibly their entire family for revenge.

Al Zidon must weigh these factors.

He must decide if the Americans can truly protect him after the information is provided.

He must consider what will happen to him in the new Iraq that is taking shape.

Will he be seen as a patriot who helped remove dangerous criminals? Or will he be branded a traitor who sold out Iraqis to foreign occupiers? The answer depends on factors beyond his control on which narrative ultimately prevails in post invasion Iraq.

For American commanders, this intelligence represents a breakthrough.

The hunt for high-v valueue targets from the former [music] regime has been frustrating.

Saddam Hussein himself remains at large.

Many of his key lieutenants have vanished into Iraq’s complex network of tribal and family connections.

The Hussein brothers have been ghosts rumored to be in a dozen places but confirmed in none.

Now suddenly there is precision.

A house number, a street name, a credible source.

The decision to act comes quickly.

This opportunity cannot be allowed to slip away.

Plans are drawn up overnight.

The 101st Airborne Division stationed in Mosul will conduct the raid.

The mission is designated Operation Red Dawn, though this particular action is only one piece of a larger campaign to capture or eliminate former regime leadership.

Nearly 200 soldiers will be involved, a massive force for what is ostensibly a single house raid.

But given the targets, no one wants to take chances.

The planning is meticulous.

Commanders study satellite imagery of the house and surrounding area.

They identify potential escape routes and plan how to block them.

They consider what weapons might be inside and how to counter them.

They discuss rules of engagement, particularly given that a 14-year-old is reportedly among the occupants.

The soldiers being briefed understand the significance of this mission.

Capturing or killing Udai and Kusai Hussein would be a major victory.

These are not mid-level functionaries or ordinary soldiers.

These are the sons of Saddam Hussein, men whose names have been synonymous with the regime’s brutality for decades.

Their faces have been on playing cards distributed to troops, part of the deck of most wanted former regime members.

Equipment is checked multiple times.

Ammunition is distributed.

Body armor is inspected.

Communication systems are tested.

Every soldier knows their specific role in the operation.

The approach routes are rehearsed.

The formations are practiced.

Nothing is left to chance because the targets are too valuable and too dangerous to allow any margin for error.

Intelligence officers provide lastminute updates.

The occupants are still in the house as of the latest observation.

There is no indication they suspect anything.

The element of surprise should be complete.

But surprises in combat work both ways.

And the Americans know that Uday and Kus are not ordinary targets.

They have military training.

They have access to weapons.

They have every reason to fight rather than surrender.

As the final hours of July 21st tick away, two very different groups are preparing for the same location.

Inside, four men sleep uneasily, unaware that their sanctuary has become their trap.

Outside, American forces are loading equipment, briefing soldiers, and moving into position.

The distance between these two groups is measured not just in meters, but in moments.

Those moments are running out.

The first light of dawn breaks over Mosul at approximately 5:30 a.

m.

The air is already warm, promising another scorching day.

In the house on Fallast Street, the men are beginning to stir.

Another night has passed without incident.

Perhaps there is a moment of relief, a brief sense that they have survived one more day.

That sense will last less than 4 hours.

At 10:00 a.

m.

, the quiet of Fasten Street shatters.

Humvees and armored vehicles roll into position, blocking exits from the area.

Soldiers from the 1001st Airborne, Task Force 20, and other special operations units deploy rapidly.

Loudspeakers crackle to life, broadcasting commands in Arabic.

The house is surrounded.

The occupants need to surrender immediately.

Inside, the response is immediate.

Weapons are grabbed.

Positions are taken.

Uday moves to a window despite his limp.

His face set with determination.

Cusay issues calm instructions.

The military commander even now.

Abdul Samad checks his rifle.

Young Mustafa, just 14 years old, picks up a weapon.

Following his father’s lead, there will be no surrender.

The American commanders outside are prepared for this possibility.

They offer multiple chances for the occupants to come out peacefully.

The loudspeaker announcements continue.

Minutes pass with no response except silence from within the house.

Then the first shots ring out.

The firefight that follows is unlike almost anything American forces have experienced in Iraq up to this point.

The men inside the house do not shoot wildly or panic.

They fire with discipline, using the building structure to their advantage.

Bullets strike vehicles.

Soldiers take cover.

What was planned as a quick raid transforms into an extended siege.

The defenders have chosen their positions well.

The houses’s thick walls provide excellent protection against small arms fire.

Windows are positioned to give good fields of fire toward the approaches.

The men inside are not random insurgents, but trained individuals who understand tactics and how to maximize their defensive advantages.

[music] American soldiers attempt to move closer using standard urban warfare techniques.

They advance in teams, covering each other’s movements.

But every approach is met with accurate fire.

The defenders are conserving their ammunition, taking aimed shots rather than spraying bullets.

This is the work of professionals, not desperate amateurs.

The sound of the firefight is deafening.

Automatic weapons crack continuously.

Bullets ricochet off stone walls and paved streets.

Spent shell casings accumulate on the ground.

The smell of gunpowder fills the air.

Nearby residents have fled or are cowering in their homes, praying that stray rounds do not find them.

The Americans return fire with overwhelming force.

Machine guns mounted on Humvees open up.

Soldiers advance using fire and movement tactics, but the thick walls of the house absorb punishment that would shred a typical structure.

The men inside continue shooting.

An hour passes.

The firefight shows no signs of stopping.

The defenders have positioned themselves well, covering the main approaches to the building.

Every attempt to advance is met with concentrated fire.

American forces have advantages in numbers, equipment, and firepower.

But the architecture of the house creates a tactical challenge.

Around 11:00 a.

m.

, the decision is made to escalate.

If the defenders will not surrender and cannot be easily overrun, heavier weapons will be employed.

Tow missiles designed to destroy tanks are brought forward.

The first missile slams into the house with devastating effect.

Walls crack.

Debris explodes outward, but the shooting from inside continues.

The TW missile is a formidable weapon capable of penetrating armored vehicles.

Against a residential building, its effect is catastrophic.

The warhead detonates on impact, creating a massive explosion that sends shock waves [music] through the structure.

Dust and smoke billow out from the impact point.

For a moment, there is silence, as if the violence has shocked even the combatants.

Then, incredibly, fire resumes from inside the house.

The defenders are still alive, still fighting, still refusing to surrender.

This level of resistance is shocking to the Americans outside.

The house should have been neutralized.

The occupants should be dead or incapacitated, yet they continue to shoot.

More missiles follow.

The house begins to collapse in sections.

Smoke pours from shattered windows.

The sound is thunderous, [music] echoing across the neighborhood.

Civilians who live nearby have long since fled or taken cover.

This is now purely a battlefield.

All pretense of civilian normaly erased by violence.

Each missile impact creates new damage.

The roof begins to sag.

Interior walls collapse.

The structural integrity of the building is failing.

Yet still return fire comes from within.

The defenders shift positions, moving through the deteriorating structure to find new firing points.

Their determination is remarkable.

Even as the building literally crumbles around them, American commanders outside are faced with a difficult situation.

The level of destruction being inflicted is massive.

The risk of civilian casualties in surrounding buildings is increasing.

But the mission is clear.

Uday and Kusai Hussein cannot be allowed to escape.

Whatever it takes to ensure they are captured or eliminated, that level of force is authorized.

Inside the disintegrating house, the situation is desperate.

The structure is failing around them.

Dust and smoke make breathing difficult.

The concussive force of missile impacts is overwhelming.

Yet, the defenders continue fighting.

Perhaps they know that surrender means capture.

trial and likely execution.

Perhaps they choose to go down fighting rather than give their enemies the satisfaction of taking them alive.

Perhaps in these final moments they are motivated by the same stubborn pride that defined their lives.

Kusay’s son Mustafa is hit.

The teenager falls mortally wounded.

His father cannot reach him, cannot help him, can only continue fighting as the building collapses around them.

The bodyguard, Abdul Samad, goes down next.

Three men remain, then two.

The reality of their situation is inescapable now.

The house is being systematically destroyed.

Each missile strike brings walls closer to total collapse.

The amount of ammunition they have is finite.

The number of American soldiers outside is not.

Around 12:15 p.

m.

, more than 2 hours after the firefight began, there is a change.

The return fire from the house becomes sporadic, then stops entirely.

The Americans wait, weapons trained on the smoking ruins.

Is this a pause to reload, a tactical shift, or has the fighting finally ended? Minutes pass in tense silence.

Then comes the order.

Task Force 20 operators begin their approach, moving carefully through the debris.

They enter what remains of the building, weapons ready for any last resistance.

There is none.

The scene inside the destroyed house is one of total devastation.

The structure [music] has partially collapsed.

Walls that stood for years are now rubble.

Furniture is shredded.

Everything is covered in dust and the acurid smell of explosives.

In the wreckage, soldiers find four bodies.

All are male.

All show signs of severe trauma from the sustained assault.

Identifying them with certainty will require time and formal procedures, but the initial assessment suggests that these are indeed the targets of the raid.

Uday Hussein is identified first.

Even in death, his distinctive features are recognizable.

The injuries from the 1996 attack are evident on his body.

He died as he lived, refusing to submit.

Kusai Hussein lies nearby.

The younger brother, the more controlled one, the military strategist who oversaw some of the regime’s darkest operations.

His expression, witnesses later report, appears almost peaceful.

Mustafa, just 14 years old, is found in another section of the house.

The teenager never had a chance to live a life separate from his family’s legacy.

He was born into privilege and violence, and he died the same way.

Abdul Samad, the bodyguard, completes the grim tally.

A professional to the end, he died doing what he was trained to do.

The bodies are removed carefully, photographed extensively, and transported to a secure location.

The process of formal identification will involve dental records, DNA testing, and facial recognition analysis.

American authorities want absolute certainty before announcing that two of the most wanted men in Iraq are dead.

News begins to spread almost immediately.

Anyway, in Mosul, word travels through the neighborhoods that something major has happened on Fallon Street.

People emerge cautiously to see the destroyed house, the military vehicles, the controlled chaos of a major operations aftermath.

By evening, reporters are arriving.

By the next day, the story will dominate international [music] news.

The sons of Saddam Hussein, symbols of the regime’s brutality and excess, are dead.

killed in a firefight that lasted over four hours.

Refusing to surrender until the very end.

In the days following the raid, details emerge about the brother’s final months on the run.

They moved constantly, never staying more than a few nights in one location.

They relied on a shrinking circle of loyalists, men whose commitment was tested by the increasing pressure of coalition operations and the temptation [music] of enormous bounties.

The relationship between Uday and Kus in those final months is a subject of speculation.

They had never been particularly close as adults.

Their personalities were too different, their roles in the regime too distinct.

U was the wild card, the son whose behavior often embarrassed even his brutal father.

Kus was the reliable one, the heir who actually understood power and how to wield it.

Yet in the end, they died together.

Whether this was by choice or circumstance is unclear.

Perhaps in those final months, as everything collapsed, they found something approaching brotherhood.

Perhaps they simply had nowhere else to go.

Perhaps the younger brother felt obligated to watch over the older one, whose injuries made independent survival difficult.

The death of Uday eliminates a figure who was widely feared and hated throughout Iraq.

Stories about his behavior were legendary, though separating truth from embellishment is difficult.

What is certain is that he used his position to act without restraint, that he hurt many people, that he showed no remorse for his actions.

Cusi’s death removes a different kind of threat.

He was the operational brain behind much of the regime’s security apparatus.

He knew where bodies were buried, literally and figuratively.

He understood the networks of informants and collaborators.

His knowledge of the regime’s inner workings was encyclopedic.

With both brothers gone, the Hussein dynasty suffers a blow from which it cannot recover.

Saddam himself will be captured in December 2003.

Hiding in a hole on a farm near Trit.

The regime that once seemed invincible, that ruled through fear and violence for over two decades, has been dismantled piece by piece.

Nawaf al- Zidon, the man who provided the intelligence that led to the raid, receives his $30 million reward.

But money cannot buy safety.

In the complex world of post invasion Iraq, being known as the man who betrayed the Hussein brothers makes him a target.

He must relocate, hide his identity, live with the knowledge that many will view him not as a hero, but as a traitor.

The house on Fallon Street becomes a landmark of sorts, at least temporarily.

People come to see where the Hussein brothers made their last stand.

Some cheer their deaths.

Others mourn them, not because they love the brothers, but because they represented a kind of Iraqi strength against foreign invasion.

The complexity of Iraqi opinion resists simple categories.

For American forces, the operation is considered a success.

Two high value targets eliminated.

No American casualties despite a fierce firefight.

The military aspects are clearcut, but the political and psychological dimensions are more complicated.

Killing the Hussein brothers does not end the insurgency.

Violence actually increases in the months following their deaths.

The simple narrative that removing regime leaders will bring peace proves false.

The bodies of Udai and Kusay are eventually released for burial.

According to Islamic tradition, burial should occur quickly, but the need for absolute identification takes precedence.

When they are finally laid to rest, it is without the ceremony or public mourning that would have accompanied the death of such highranking figures in the past.

The regime that gave them power is [music] gone.

The fear they inspired has transformed into something more complicated.

Mustafa’s death raises questions that many find difficult to address.

He was 14 years old.

He picked up a weapon and fought alongside his father and uncle, but he was still a child.

His story is tragic in ways that transcend politics.

Born into a family that commanded absolute power, he never had the chance to be anything other than a Hussein.

His choices, if they can be called that, were constrained by circumstances he did not create.

Years later, those who participated in the raid would reflect on what happened that July morning.

Some remember it as a military operation executed successfully under difficult conditions.

Others think about the 4 hours of sustained combat.

The destruction required to end the standoff.

The bodies in the rubble.

War creates memories that resist neat categorization.

The last 24 hours of Uday and Kus Hussein encapsulate much about the regime they served and the violence that defined Iraq under their father’s rule.

They lived without constraint, answerable to no one, treating the country as their personal domain.

When that world collapsed, they found themselves hunted, vulnerable, and ultimately trapped.

Their decision to fight rather than surrender says something about how they viewed themselves and their position.

Perhaps they could not imagine submitting to capture and trial.

Perhaps they preferred death to the humiliation of being paraded before cameras.

Perhaps they simply chose to go out on their own terms, weapons in hand rather than in chains.

The firefight on Fallon Street lasted over 4 hours, an eternity in combat terms.

It required massive firepower to finally end.

The men inside the house, outnumbered and outgunned, held out far longer than military logic suggested they could.

Whether this was courage or stubbornness or simply the psychology of men who had never accepted limits is open to interpretation.

What is certain is that their deaths marked the end of an era.

The Hussein dynasty, which had ruled Iraq through fear and violence for decades, was broken.

Saddam himself was still alive, but in hiding.

His power gone, his sons dead, his regime in ruins.

Within months, he too would be captured, eventually tried and executed.

The story of the Hussein brothers final hours is ultimately a story about the limits of power.

They spent their lives believing they were untouchable, that their father’s position protected them from consequences, that they could act with impunity.

For many years, this belief proved accurate.

But power, as they discovered in those final months on the run, is contextual.

Remove the infrastructure of state control, and even the most feared men become fugitives.

They died as they lived in violence and refusal to submit.

Whether this makes them tragic figures or simply consequences of their own actions is a question each observer must answer individually.

What cannot be disputed is that their last 24 hours were spent in a place far from the palaces they once inhabited, fighting a battle they could not win, facing an end they perhaps always knew was coming.

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