Muhammad al-Khuli
Muhammad al-Khouli is a Syrian former military officer who served as the chief of the Syrian Arab Air Force and the director of the Air Force Intelligence Directorate throughout the presidency of Hafez al-Assad.
Early life
Al-Khouli was born in Beit Yashout in 1937 to an Alawite family descending from the Hadadeen tribe, near the coastal city of Jableh. Information on his early life is scarce, although it is known that he was not involved, nor interested, in the Ba'ath Party which took power in Syria in March 1963.Career
Early service
In 1964, al-Khouli was appointed Deputy Chief of the Syrian Air Force under Hafez al-Assad. When al-Assad ousted the government of Nureddin al-Atassi and Salah Jadid in 1970, he appointed al-Khuli Chief of Air Force Intelligence. Between 1971 and 1973 he underwent training in East Germany under both the GDR Air Force and the Stasi. Eventually, he gained the additional prominent position of Chairman of the Presidential Intelligence Committee. Under al-Khuli's leadership, Air Force Intelligence became a powerful apparatus largely independent from scrutiny and tasked with assignments beyond its traditional roles. Practically, it oversaw the nominating of posts throughout Syria's intelligence networks and those networks' undercover activities.Hindawi affair
Following the attempted April 1986 bombing of an Israeli El Al plane in London's Heathrow Airport in what became known as the Hindawi affair, al-Khouli was dismissed from his intelligence post in 1987. He was transferred to his old post as Deputy Chief of the Air Force. Hafez al-Assad likely dismissed al-Khouli as a result of international pressure led by the United States and the United Kingdom, the latter of which had severed diplomatic relations with Syria as a result of the incident.Al-Khouli remained close to al-Assad as a presidential adviser and still maintained strong influence within the Air Force Intelligence apparatus. Indeed, his successor, Ibrahim Huweija, belonged to the same tribe and has been described by some Syrians as "al-Khouli's creature." According to historian Hanna Batatu, "it is not unlikely that al-Khouli decided to take ultimate responsibility for imprudence or missteps by Air Intelligence and to consent to the semblance of presidential disfavor in the higher interest of the regime."