Abdul Fattah Qudsiyeh

Syrian major general From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Abdul Fattah Qudsiyeh (Arabic: عبد الفتاح قدسية; born 1953) is a Syrian former military officer and the former deputy director of the Syrian National Security Bureau. He was also a close adviser to former Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.[1]

RegionalSecretary
Bashar al-Assad
Preceded byAssef Shawkat
Succeeded byRafiq Shahadah
Preceded byIz a-Din Isma'il
Quick facts Major General, Deputy Director of National Security Bureau of the Regional Command ...
Abdul Fattah Qudsiyeh
عبد الفتاح قدسية
Deputy Director of National Security Bureau of
the Regional Command
In office
25 July 2012  8 December 2024
Regional Secretary
Bashar al-Assad
Director of Military Intelligence Directorate
In office
1 July 2009  25 July 2012
Preceded byAssef Shawkat
Succeeded byRafiq Shahadah
Director of Air Force Intelligence Directorate
In office
2005  1 July 2009
Preceded byIz a-Din Isma'il
Succeeded byJamil Hassan
Personal details
Born1953 (age 7273)
PartyBa'ath Party
Military service
Allegiance Ba'athist Syria
Branch/service Syrian Arab Army
Years of service
1973–2012
Rank Major General
UnitSpecial Tasks Regiment
Battles/warsYom Kippur War
Syrian civil war
Close

Early life

Qudsiyeh was born in Hama in 1953.[2][3]

Career

Qudsiyeh was a major general. He served in the special forces and was the head of the Air Force Intelligence Directorate of Syria.[4] He also served as the head of the Syrian Military Intelligence Directorate from 2009 to July 2012.[4][5]

After the National Security headquarters bombing in July 2012, he was appointed as the deputy director of the National Security Bureau which became headed by Ali Mamlouk.[6] Qudsiyeh was replaced by Rafiq Shahadah as general director of the military intelligence.[6]

Sanctions

Since 9 May 2011, Qudsiyeh is one of several officials sanctioned by the European Union.[7][8][9] He was added to the European Union's sanction list on the grounds that he "involved in violence against the civilian population" during the Syrian civil war.[2] He was also sanctioned by the United States[1] and the Swiss government.[3]

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI