What happened to Saddam Hussein, a senior female official called "the mother of biochemistry" by the United States?

Saddam Hussein, known as the "biochemical mother" of the United States, eventually died of breast cancer in Jordan. In fact, when she is mentioned in America, people have a fear of her. Her name is Huda Saleh Mehdi Amac, nicknamed "Mrs. Anthrax", and she ranks 53rd in the wanted list issued by the United States, codenamed "Red Heart 5". It can be said that the United States is afraid of such Iraqi biologists.

Saddam Hussein, a female executive known as the "mother of biochemistry" in the United States, 1953 was born in Baghdad. Ammache first studied at Texas Women's University in Denton, USA, and obtained a master's degree in microbiology. Later, she spent four years at the University of Missouri in the early 1980s, and received her doctorate in microbiology in1983+February.

American intelligence agencies have always believed that Amachi, a senior Sadr woman known as the "mother of biochemistry", played an important role in 199 1 rebuilding Saddam's chemical and biological weapons program after the Gulf War. She studied under Nasser Hendawi, the "father of Iraq's chemical and biological weapons", successively served as the chairman of the Iraqi Microbiology Association and the dean of the Faculty of Science of Baghdad University, and joined the Iraqi Revolutionary Command Committee in May 20001year.

At one time, the United States was afraid of Amachi, the "mother of biochemistry", and thought that she was studying chemical and biological weapons for Saddam. On May 5, 2003, the US Department of Defense arrested Amac. However, after her arrest, she did not disclose any information about Saddam to the US military, and then the US released her because no evidence was found. After her release in 2005, Amache went to Jordan, where she died of breast cancer.