Mohammad Khaled al-Rahmoun

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Mohammad Khaled al-Rahmoun
محمد خالد الرحمون
Minister of Interior
In office
26 November 2018  10 December 2024
PresidentBashar al-Assad
Prime MinisterImad Khamis
Hussein Arnous
Mohammad Ghazi al-Jalali
Preceded byMohammad al-Shaar
Succeeded byMohammad Abdul Rahman
Director of Political Security Directorate
In office
2017  26 November 2018
PresidentBashar al-Assad
Preceded byNasser Ali
Succeeded byHossam Louka
Personal details
Born (1957-04-01) 1 April 1957 (age 69)
PartyBa'ath Party
Alma materHoms Military Academy
Military service
Allegiance Ba'athist Syria
Rank Major General[2]
Battles/warsSyrian Civil War

Mohammad Khaled al-Rahmoun (Arabic: محمد خالد الرحمون, born 1 April 1957) is a former military commander, and served as Syrian Minister of the Interior prior to the fall of the Assad regime.[3][4]

He joined the military, where he graduated from the War College with the rank of major in air defense and was assigned to the Air Force Intelligence Directorate.[5]

In 2004, he assumed office of director at the Air Force Intelligence Department in Daraa, with the rank of lieutenant colonel, then he rose through the military ranks and security positions until he assumed the position as director of the Air Force Intelligence Branch in the southern region located in the city of Harasta in 2011.[5] During the Syrian Civil War, he was held responsible for numerous human rights violations in Daraa governorate, including arbitrary arrests, torture, forced disappearances, and indiscriminate shelling of towns, causing thousands of civilians to be displaced.[6] In mid-2015, by decree of Bashar al-Assad, al-Rahmoun was appointed as head of the Political Security Directorate of the Syrian Interior Ministry.[6][7]

On 26 November 2018, he was promoted to the rank of Major General and appointed Minister of Interior in Imad Khamis government, succeeding Major General Mohammad al-Shaar.

On 7 December 2024, during the Syrian opposition offensives approaching Damascus, al-Rahmoun downplayed the threat to the capital by stating that "there is a very strong security and military cordon on the far outskirts of Damascus and its countryside, and no one (...) can penetrate this line of defense that we, the armed forces, are erecting.",[8] while in private he admitted to Mohammad Ghazi al-Jalali that the situation was not under control.[9] The next day, Damascus fell to the rebel forces, and many members of the ruling junta fled the city.[10]

Sanctions

See also

References

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