The Insider: Trapped In Saddam's Brutal Regime

Author:   Ala Bashir
Publisher:   Little, Brown Book Group
ISBN:  

9780349119359


Pages:   352
Publication Date:   07 July 2005
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained


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The Insider: Trapped In Saddam's Brutal Regime


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Overview

Ala Bashir, former dean of Medicine at Baghdad University and Iraq's most highly decorated doctor, was Saddam's personal physician from 1983 until spring 2003. He rose to prominence as a plastic surgeon during the Iran-Iraq war, performing over 22,000 operations on thousands of Iraqi soldiers. He is also Iraq's most award-laden artist. Saddam felt a particular affinity for Bashir's pictures, sculptures and monuments. Before long he welcomed Bashir into his inner circle, confiding in him in times of war and peace. From his vantage point as a ''Saddam favourite'', Ala Bashir observed and tracked political events in Baghdad. He also witnessed and recorded in detail the hidden life of Saddam's regime and family, the apprehension and extravagance, the partying and killings, the intrigues and power struggles. His is a shocking revelation of a regime's total disregard for human life and dignity. Bashir protected his writings and when he left Iraq in July 2003, he brought them out too. 'Saddam's Confidante' is his memoir, based on these hidden documents, and written with his close friend, Lars Sigurd Sunnanå, one of Norway's leading journalists.

Full Product Details

Author:   Ala Bashir
Publisher:   Little, Brown Book Group
Imprint:   Abacus
Dimensions:   Width: 13.40cm , Height: 2.60cm , Length: 21.60cm
Weight:   0.380kg
ISBN:  

9780349119359


ISBN 10:   034911935
Pages:   352
Publication Date:   07 July 2005
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Out of Print
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained

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Reviews

'Apart from the insights Bashir provides on Saddam, there are also riveting tales of his dealings with other members of the Hussein clan.' EVEINING STANDARD


An apologetic memoir of life in a bloody tyrant's hip pocket. People behave strangely in dictatorships. Take the instance, by the account of Saddam Hussein's personal physician Bashir, when Uday Hussein replied to his valet's backtalk by cracking his head open. Saddam was none too happy: I'll throttle him with my own hands! he yelled, calming down only when an advisor reminded him that killing his own son wouldn't bring the dead valet back to life. Doubtless many of the women whom Uday picked up, then beat and tortured, would not have minded seeing him dead; he lived, only to be killed by American troops along with his brother, Qusay. (In that firefight, Bashir says, the bravest fighter was Qusay's 13-year-old son, Mustafa.) Bashir, an artist frequently honored by Hussein (and responsible for turning an odd snake-slaying dream of his into a widely reproduced painting), was also a gifted reconstructive surgeon who treated thousands in the course of the bloody, futile Iran-Iraq War; afterward, he wound up doing untold nose jobs, for, he writes, It is well known that few Arab women are happy with their noses. Surely many women in the Hussein circle were not, and even at the outbreak of the latest war, some were coming to him for buttock reductions, breast resizings and, yes, nose jobs. The sightings of Saddam himself in Bashir's pages are only occasional, but they are revealing: They show at turns a pragmatist, though one whose inner circle could not convince him to abandon his hatred of Israel and come to terms with Britain and the U.S. before it was too late, and at other turns a romantic, given to writing gushy genre novels in which someone very like him turns out to be the hero. Bashir clearly tries to distance himself from the mess. No dice, but these up-close notes are useful in understanding the Hussein regime. (Kirkus Reviews)


Author Information

Ala Bashir, artist, former dean of Medicine at Baghdad University and Iraq's most highly decorated doctor, was Saddam's personal physician for twenty years. He left Baghdad in July 2003.

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