
Saddam Hussein
President of Iraq and Ba'ath Party ruler
of 100 · declining trend · Goodness is mostly theoretical
Standing
24/100
Raw Score
22/85
Confidence
90%
Evidence
High
About
Saddam Hussein ruled Iraq from 1979 to 2003 through centralized force, patronage, and fear, while leading Iraq into devastating wars and overseeing mass abuses against civilians.
Public evidence shows durable patterns of coercion, broken restraint, and severe harm to Iraqis and neighboring populations; limited state-building achievements do not outweigh the scale of repression.
Five Pillars
Pillar scores (0–100%)
Muslim identity and some public religious signaling support modest belief and worship scores, but the historical record is dominated by coercion, war, broken restraint, and large-scale harm to civilians.
Goodness over time
Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.
17 Criteria Scores
Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes
Core Worldview
Contribution to Others
Personal Discipline
Reliability
Stability Under Pressure
Timeline
Key events and documented turning points
Helped drive nationalization of Iraq's oil industry
While operating as the regime's rising strongman, Saddam helped direct the nationalization of Iraq's oil industry, which expanded state revenue and strengthened the government's capacity.
→ The move increased regime resources and state reach, but also deepened the power base later used for authoritarian control.
highTook formal power and consolidated rule through fear
Saddam became president in July 1979 and used secret police, purges, and a personality cult to suppress internal opposition.
→ Iraq became more tightly controlled by a coercive personalist regime.
highLaunched the Iran-Iraq War
Saddam ordered Iraq's invasion of Iran, starting a long war of attrition that consumed lives and resources on both sides.
→ The war ended in stalemate in 1988 after enormous casualties and debt.
globalOversaw the Anfal campaign and Halabja chemical attack
During the Anfal campaign against Iraqi Kurds, regime forces used brutal tactics including chemical weapons at Halabja; reporting cited by CFR summarizes estimates of about 100,000 civilian deaths and destruction of more than 4,000 villages.
→ The campaign became one of the clearest markers of the regime's mass violence against civilians.
severeInvaded and occupied Kuwait
Saddam ordered the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait to seize oil wealth and strengthen Iraq's position after the Iran-Iraq War.
→ The invasion triggered the Persian Gulf War, occupation abuses, and long-term sanctions on Iraq.
globalCrushed postwar Kurdish and Shi'i uprisings
After Iraq's defeat in Kuwait, Saddam's regime suppressed internal uprisings, causing large-scale killing, torture, disappearances, and mass flight.
→ The repression deepened sectarian wounds and entrenched the regime's reputation for brutal survivalism.
severeWas captured after regime collapse
Following the U.S.-led invasion and the fall of Baghdad, Saddam fled and was later captured near Tikrit after months in hiding.
→ His personal rule ended, but Iraq entered a prolonged period of instability and violence.
highConvicted in the Dujail case and executed after a flawed trial
Saddam was convicted over the 1982 killing of 148 people from Dujail and executed on December 30, 2006. Human Rights Watch documented serious procedural flaws in the trial, so the conviction marked partial accountability but not a clean model of justice.
→ The execution closed his personal legal story but left broader crimes only partly aired in court.
highPressure Tests
Behavior under crisis or scrutiny
Iran-Iraq War
1980He initiated a high-stakes war that turned into years of attrition and hardship.
Response: He persisted militarily rather than showing restraint, leaving both societies with heavy casualties and debt.
negative1991 internal uprisings
1991His rule faced major Kurdish and Shi'i revolts after the Gulf War defeat.
Response: He answered pressure with large-scale repression, killing, torture, and displacement.
negative2003 overthrow and capture
2003Foreign invasion and domestic collapse ended his government.
Response: He went into hiding and continued defiant rhetoric, but the regime rapidly disintegrated around him.
negativeProgression
crisis years
Repeated crises produced more violence, external aggression, and harsher repression rather than correction.
deterioratingcurrent stage
His historical legacy is dominated by authoritarian violence, regional destabilization, and only partial courtroom accountability.
closedearly years
Poverty, Ba'athist radicalization, and early commitment to conspiratorial politics shaped his rise.
hardeninggrowth years
From 1968 through the 1970s he combined state-building with deeper personal control.
consolidatingBehavioral Patterns
Positive
- • Demonstrated strategic discipline and persistence over decades
- • Used state control of oil to expand regime capacity
Concerns
- • Used torture, purges, and fear as routine instruments of rule
- • Chose militarized expansion over restraint
- • Favored family and loyalist networks over accountable institutions
- • Public religiosity appears inconsistent with the scale of documented abuses
Evidence Quality
4
Strong
2
Medium
0
Weak
Overall: high
Scores reflect public evidence and historical records, not hidden belief or the full inner life of the person.