Ali Haydar (Syrian army officer)

Ali Haydar
Haydar in 1987
Native name
علي حيدر
Born1932 (1932)
Died5 August 2022(2022-08-05) (aged 89–90)
Allegiance Second Syrian Republic (1952–1958)
United Arab Republic (1958–1961)
Second Syrian Republic (1961–1963)
Ba'athist Syria (1963–1994)
Branch Syrian Arab Army
Service years1952–1994
Rank Major General
Unit14th Special Forces Division
CommandsSpecial Forces Command (1968–1988, 1990–1994)
Conflicts

Ali Haydar (Arabic: علي حيدر‎; 1932 – 5 August 2022), known as the "Father of the Syrian Special Forces", was a Syrian military officer who was the commander of the Syrian Special Forces for 26 years. He was a close confidant to President Hafez al-Assad and one of the members of Assad's inner circle. Born in the village of Hallet Ara, Haydar was a member of the Ba'ath Party from his youth. He was commissioned into the Syrian Army in 1952 after a stint studying at the Homs Military Academy. After the Ba'ath Party seized power in a 1963 coup d'état, Haydar was put in charge of Syria's special forces and supported al-Assad in his rise to the presidency. During this time he was deployed to Lebanon during their civil war. Haydar opposed the 1984 coup d'état attempt led by Rifaat al-Assad, instead remaining loyal to Hafez al-Assad. After suffering an aneurysm and leaving his post in 1988, he returned to lead the special forces again in the early 1990s. At the time a Major General, he was formally removed from his position and then imprisoned in August 1994, though he was treated well during his brief prison stay and was released without a trial or public humiliation. Haydar died in Latakia at the age of 90.