When Saddam Hussein grabbed power in 1979, Iraq had no long-term foreign debt. Cash reserves were $36 billion. Iraq had high literacy and public universities; it had extensive socialized health care. It was becoming a “first world” nation.
Soon, however, this violent, cunning despot began squandering that wealth. Borrowing tens of billions of dollars, he built up a vast military and security apparatus. In 1980 - with the United States’ blessing - Saddam invaded his neighbor, the Ayatollah Khomeini’s oil-rich Iran. To Saddam’s utter surprise, that war wasn’t over in a few weeks. It became an eight-year long quagmire. Hundreds of thousands on each side were maimed and killed.