Saddam Hussein built torture dungeon and execution chamber in heart of New York City opposite mayor Michael Bloomberg’s home, insiders claim

  • Written by:

Hussein installed dungeon in the Iraqi Permanent Mission building in 1979
It was used to detain Iraqi civilians as leverage on Iraq-based dissidents
Detainees would be tortured and murdered in the basement room
Bodies would be shipped to Iraq in unopenable diplomatic packages
Bloomberg has lived opposite the Upper East Side building since 1973
The torture room was operating during his first year as mayor, 2002-2003
Feds raided after Hussein fell in 2003; it was converted into a kitchenette

By James Wilkinson For Dailymail.com
Saddam Hussein built a secret torture dungeon and execution chamber in the heart of New York City and even shipped the bodies of his victims out of the country using diplomatic immunity, insiders say.

On taking control of Iraq in 1979, the dictator installed a ‘detention room’ in the basement of the country’s Permanent Mission building in Manhattan’s Upper East Side.

There, sources told the NY Post, Iraqi civilians were held in detention, subjected to gruesome torture and even murdered – just across the road from Michael Bloomberg, who would later become the city’s mayor.

Despot: Saddam Hussein (pictured center, with King Hussein of Jordan, far left, in 1990) had a torture room built into Iraq’s New York Mission building when he assumed power in 1979

House of horrors: The dungeon in the Upper East Side building (pictured) was used to detain the relatives of political dissidents, some of whom were brutally beaten, tortured or even killed

House of horrors: The dungeon in the Upper East Side building (pictured) was used to detain the relatives of political dissidents, some of whom were brutally beaten, tortured or even killed

Neighbor: Michael Bloomberg has lived across the street from the Mission since 1973. The dungeon was still in operation until 2003 - his first year in office as mayor of New York

Neighbor: Michael Bloomberg has lived across the street from the Mission since 1973. The dungeon was still in operation until 2003 – his first year in office as mayor of New York

The detention room was equipped with sturdy doors that were near-impossible to break in or out of, and buried so deep that victims’ screams could not be heard.

And even if they did somehow manage to break out, guard equipped with 9mm pistols and Kalashnikov rifles would be on hand to deal with the ‘problem.’

In that terrifying dungeon, beneath the five-story Mission at 14 East 79th Street, family members of ‘troublesome’ Iraqi citizens would be locked up to coerce their relatives back in Iraq.

Some would even be tortured by Hussein’s sinister agents, the Mukhabarat, who would pull out fingernails and toenails, and hit them with hoses, planks and copper wire.

If anyone died in the dungeon – and they did, according to the official sources, who did not want to be named – their bodies would be smuggled out of the US.

‘They just put [the body] in a diplomatic box and it can just be shipped,’ she source said. ‘This is diplomatic – nobody has the authority to examine it or open it.’

Mukhabarat agents would typically wait until the unwitting Iraqi citizen came to the building on typical business before dragging them down to the dungeon.

The officials also confirmed that Hussein’s men had committed similar acts of violence in other countries. 

‘Mukhabarat does whatever the hell Mukhabarat needs to do,’ the official said. ‘They are the last people you ever wanted to meet during the Saddam era.’ 

The basement also contained two other rooms: An office, and a communications center used to receive and send orders to and from Iraq.

Sadist: Operatives of Hussein (pictured in Baghdad in 1983) communicated with Iraq from an operations room also located in the basement of the building. Hussein was deposed in 2003

Sadist: Operatives of Hussein (pictured in Baghdad in 1983) communicated with Iraq from an operations room also located in the basement of the building. Hussein was deposed in 2003

Home: This is Bloomberg's home, opposite the Mission. Feds raided the Iraqi building in 2003 after Hussain fell. The dungeon is now a kitchenette for the new Iraqi government

Home: This is Bloomberg’s home, opposite the Mission. Feds raided the Iraqi building in 2003 after Hussain fell. The dungeon is now a kitchenette for the new Iraqi government

Six years before the ‘detention room’ was built, Michael Bloomberg – then a 31-year-old general partner in a Wall Street investment bank – bought the house opposite, at 17 East 79th Street.

That meant he was frequently unwittingly stood just tens of feet away from imprisoned, tortured and terrified victims of Hussein’s brutal regime.

Hussein’s regime fell in 2003, one year into Bloomberg’s 11-year tenure as mayor of New York, and the Mission was soon broken wide open by the Feds.

Arguing that the US was now in control of Iraq, the agents broke open the vaults and offices, seizing documents, computers and other information.

Now both Iraq and the Mission are under new management, and the ‘detention room’ is no more, having been refurbished as a kitchenette at a cost of around $120,000. 

It’s not known whether dining guests are told about the room’s former use.