El Hijo de Saddam Hussein que ATERRORIZÓ a Irak: La Caída de Uday Hussein

July 22, 2003. An ordinary house in Mosul, in northern Iraq. Inside, cornered, is Uday Hussein, Saddam's eldest son, the man before whom an entire country had held its breath for almost twenty years. He wasn't ruling, but he could do anything to anyone without anyone stopping him. He turned sports into a tool of punishment, ran a newspaper and a militia of tens of thousands of men, and lived convinced that impunity was forever. This is the story of how that limitless power grew, of the assassination attempt that left him scarred, of the silent brother who took his throne, and of the phone call and the thirty million dollars that ended it all in a borrowed house. 🔔 If you think the official story doesn't tell the whole story, SUBSCRIBE. 📍 IN THIS VIDEO: 00:00 — A house surrounded in Mosul 02:00 — The boy who learned there were no consequences 04:00 — 1984: When sport became a threat 06:30 — The Babil newspaper and Saddam's Fedayeen 09:00 — Living in the shadow of a single man 11:30 — 1988: The line he crossed at a party 13:30 — The gilded exile of Geneva 15:00 — December 1996: 17 bullets in Al-Mansur 17:30 — The silent brother and the lost throne 19:30 — 30 million dollars and a phone call 21:30 — Four hours of siege in Mosul 23:30 — The day the victims regained their voice 📚 LINKS AND RESOURCES: — Subscribe:    / @frenteocultoofficial   📺 HIDDEN FRONT — The story that books prefer to leave on the margins.