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  1. Qusay Hussein

    Qusay Hussein

    Iraqi politician

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  1. Qusay Saddam Hussein al-Nasiri al-Tikriti (or Qusai, Arabic: قصي صدام حسين; 17 May 1966 – 22 July 2003) was an Iraqi politician, military leader, and the second son of Saddam Hussein. He was appointed as his father's heir apparent in 2000. He was also in charge of the Republican Guard, a branch of the Iraqi military.

    • Sahar Abd al-Rashid (m. 1988–2003; his death)
    • Saddam Hussein
  2. Uday and Qusay Hussein, sons of deposed Iraqi President Saddam Hussein, were killed during an American military operation conducted on July 22, 2003, in the city of Mosul, Iraq. The operation originally intended to apprehend them, but turned into a four-hour gun battle outside a fortified safehouse which ended with the death of the brothers ...

    • 22 July 2003; 20 years ago
  3. 3 days ago · Qusay Hussein (born May 17, 1966, Baghdad, Iraq—died July 22, 2003, Mosul, Iraq) was an Iraqi official who was the second son of Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein. He and his older brother Uday were instrumental in their father’s brutal 24-year rule over Iraq.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
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  5. Feb 9, 2010 · The former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein’s sons, Qusay and Uday, were killed by U.S. forces in Mosul on July 22, 2003. They were known for their cruelty, corruption, and illegal oil smuggling. They were also Saddam’s first-born and his heirs, until Uday was shot in 1996 and Qusay was captured in 2003.

  6. Jul 23, 2003 · Wed 23 Jul 2003 18.51 EDT. He was a monster even by the standards of Saddam Hussein's Iraq, a sadist with a taste for cruelty so extreme that even his father was forced to acknowledge that his...

  7. Jul 25, 2003 · Fri 25 Jul 2003 13.56 EDT. Uday and Qusay Hussein, Saddam Hussein's two sons, suffered more than 20 bullet wounds each in their final stand against American forces, US military pathologists...

  8. Jun 20, 2019 · In this intimate documentary produced by MSF, Qusay shares his extraordinary journey—from struggling with the painful aftermath of the attack in Iraq, to rebuilding his life at MSF’s reconstructive surgery program hospital in Jordan, to reinventing himself again in the US.

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