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Hany Saeed
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Hany Saeed
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Saeed Hani - Hani Dance - photo by Bert Van Pelt
#saeed hani#hani dance#bert van pelt#syrian ballet dancers#dance#ballet photography#dancer#danseur#ballerino#bailarín#tänzer#boys of ballet#ballet men
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Poster showing “Iraqi Most Wanted” playing cards distributed to U.S. military personnel during Operation Iraqi Freedom, April 24, 2003.
Record Group 330: Records of the Office of the Secretary of Defense
Series: Combined Military Service Digital Photographic Files
Image description: Detail of poster, showing the joker (Iraqi military ranks), Ace of Spades (Saddam Husayn al-Tikriti), Ace of Diamonds (Abid Hamid Mahmud al-Tikriti), Ace of Clubs (Qusay Saddam Husayn al-Tikiriti), King of Clubs (Izzat Ibrahim al-Duri), King of Hearts (Hani Abd al-Latif Tilfah al-Tikriti), Queen of Spades (Muhammad Hamza Zubaydi), Queen of Diamonds (Muzahim Sa’b Hasan al-Tikriti), and Queen of Clubs (Kamal Mustaba Abdallah Sultan al-Tikriti).
Image description: Poster showing each card in a standard deck. Each card has an image of a person, their name, and their position in the Iraqi government.
Transcription:
[text at bottom of poster, under images of cards]
IRAQI'S MOST WANTED
By Tom Infield, Knight Ridder - European edition, Saturday, April 12, 2003
WASHINGTON -- Saddam Hussein, of course, drew the ace of spades. The U.S. Central Command has introduced a new way for troops to pass the time: a pack of playing cards depicting the ousted Iraqi dictator and 51 of his key henchmen. Saddam's elder son, Odai, is the ace of hearts in the deck, which has a desert camouflage design on the back of the cards. Odai has been accused of serial rapes and murders of young women. Saddam's younger son, Qusai, is the ace of clubs. Brig. Gen. Vincent Brooks publicly introduced the cards Friday at a news briefing in Qatar. "This deck of cards is one example of what we provide to soldiers out in the field, with the faces of the individuals and what their role is," he said. Officials said the cards, which also include several jokers without faces, had a purpose besides helping to kill boredom. They're a military version of the FBI's Ten Most Wanted. As they get passed around, they might help a soldier or Marine catch one of the figures. At the Pentagon, an official said that only a couple of hundred decks had been sent to the combat zone, but that more could be dealt out in a jiffy. The cards were made up by wags at the Defense Intelligence Agency, which is on the hunt for the depicted characters. The Pentagon has not copyrighted the cards, which means that anyone could produce them, a defense official said. Beyond Saddam and his sons, only a few of the faces or names would likely be familiar to a soldier. One, perhaps, is Tariq Aziz, the longtime foreign minister, who for some reason is the lowly eight of spades. Nowhere to be found is Mohammed Saeed al-Sahaf, the former Iraqi information minister whose daily briefings--in which he denied the all-too-obvious advances of American troops had made him the object of comedy spoofs. He was quite a card, but he's not in the deck.
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Saeed Hani - Hani Dance - photo by Reding Pit Photography
#saeed hani#hani dance#Reding Pit Photography#reding pit#dance#ballet#dancer#tänzer#danseur#ballerino#bailarín#boys of ballet#ballet men#syrian ballet dancers
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