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Saddam Hussein's Final Days In Iraq

A U.S. soldier watches as a statue of Iraq's President Saddam Hussein falls in central Baghdad, Iraq April 9, 2003.
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In the summer of 2006, a squad of U.S. military policemen deployed to Iraq, eager to join the war. They were tough kids, many from small, working-class communities scattered across the American heartland, who’d joined the military for many of the familiar reasons: post-9/11 patriotism, adventure and the hope for a better life when they got out.

They were hard-charging and well trained, but nothing could have prepared them for the mission they were given a few months after they landed in Baghdad. They would be responsible for a “high-level detainee”—Saddam Hussein, the former president of Iraq. The brutal dictator had been deposed by a massive military invasion, then captured after nine months on the run. He was now the most famous prisoner in the world.

Upon receiving the news, a few of the MPs joked, “We should kill him.” Some of them knew their new charge had once said, “I wish America would bring its army and occupy Iraq. I wish they would do it so we can kill all Americans. We will roast them and eat them.”

What follows is an exclusive peek inside the walls of a palace turned prison, built to hold one man, and a tantalizing glimpse of the complex and improbable relationships that developed over the next four months these men would spend together.

Baghdad—September 2006

Specialist Steve Hutchinson was, once again, working nights. But this time, he was half a world away from the Midnight Rodeo in central Florida, where he’d been prying apart drunk brawlers. Just a few weeks before, he and his squad mates in the 551st Military Police Company—the Super 12—were given a top-secret mission: guard Saddam while he was tried by an Iraqi tribunal for some of the many atrocities he had committed during the two decades he ruled his country with a profligate brutality.

Hutch and the rest of his Super 12 team were ordered to not tell anyone about their mission, even their families. They weren’t permitted to keep a journal, all their emails were monitored, and they were subject to random searches to make sure they weren’t taking notes about what they were doing, seeing, hearing or even thinking.*

Hutch’s first shift with his notorious prisoner began at midnight. The two of them were in the bowels of the Iraqi High Tribunal (IHT), a courthouse constructed just to try Saddam and his seven co-defendants for crimes against humanity. Beneath the courtroom was a row of subterranean cells—half-wall, half-plexiglass enclosed rooms that resembled the “interrogation room in a movie”—in which Saddam and

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