BAGHDAD — Iraq has carried out the death sentence of Saadoun Sabri al-Qaisi, a high-ranking intelligence officer from the Saddam Hussein era. The execution, confirmed on February 9, 2026, closes a decades-long chapter regarding one of the most pivotal political assassinations in the nation’s history.
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- Targeting the Opposition: At the time, Ayatollah al-Sadr was the intellectual leader of the Shiite opposition and a founder of the Dawa Party.
- The 2025 Capture: After years in hiding, al-Qaisi was apprehended in a 2025 intelligence operation, leading to a swift trial that revisited the brutal crackdowns of the early 1980s.
Why It Matters Today
This execution is more than just a legal procedure; it is a significant political signal in modern Iraq:
- Religious Symbolism: The Ayatollah’s lineage remains central to Iraqi power. He was the uncle and father-in-law of Muqtada al-Sadr, the influential cleric who leads one of Iraq’s most powerful political blocs today.
- Transitional Justice: For the current government, these trials serve as a public reminder of the Ba’athist regime’s atrocities, reinforcing the legitimacy of the post-2003 order.
- Human Rights Concerns: Despite the gravity of the crimes, Iraq’s reliance on capital punishment continues to draw scrutiny from international observers who advocate for life imprisonment over the gallows.
Perspective: While the execution brings closure to many families who suffered under the former regime, it also highlights the deep, lingering sectarian and political scars that define the Iraqi landscape nearly a quarter-century after Saddam Hussein’s fall.

















