On 27 June 1993, Al-Attar, her husband, and their housekeeper were killed by a U.S. missile attack on the
Iraqi Intelligence main building, which was just behind her house, ordered by U.S. President
Bill Clinton. The building was hit by 24 rockets. Two misfired and hit their house accidentally, per her son's testimony. The attack also blinded Al-Attar's daughter. There are some rumours that the misfire was intended due to an unflattering mosaic of President
George H. W. Bush, possibly designed by Al-Attar, laid onto the floor at the entrance to the
Al-Rashid Hotel in Baghdad. Additionally, some allege that Al-Attar used pieces of her destroyed home during the American bombings in 1991 to create this controversial mosaic. It is contested that Al-Attar either designed or oversaw the commissioning of the Bush mosaic, with Al Jazeera reporting that she was the designer of the mosaic. Al-Attar's artwork did not include ceramics nor portraits but others claim she commissioned an artist to do it. The Wall Street Journal pointed out that the mosaic is signed by two marble cutters, brothers Mohsen and Majid Tabani. However, many believe that she either designed the mosaic, commissioned it, or at least oversaw its production. Her successor as director of the Saddam Art Center (also known as the Fine Art Center in Baghdad) Mukhallad al-Mukhtar maintained that she oversaw the work on it. Her death was met with an angry response in Baghdad. ==Legacy==