Hassan Hamada | |
---|---|
Native name | حسن حمادة |
Born | c. 1968 Kafr Takharim, Idlib Governorate, Syria |
Allegiance |
Syria (until 2012)
Free Syrian Army (2014–present) |
Service/branch | Syrian Air Force (until 2012) |
Years of service | ? - 2012 |
Rank | Colonel |
Unit |
|
Hassan Hamada (Arabic: حسن حمادة, born c. 1968), full name Hassan Mirei al-Hamada (Arabic: حسن ميري آل حمادة،), also spelled as Hammadeh, is a former colonel in the Syrian Air Force who, together with his MiG-21, defected to Jordan on 21 June 2012 during the Syrian civil war.
Before his defection in June 2012, Col. Hassan Hamada served in an airbase in the as-Suwayda Governorate as the head of the Scientific Research group in the 93rd Brigade.
A Jordanian security source said Hamada flew from al-Dumayr Military Airport northeast of Damascus and landed at King Hussein Air Base at 11AM. Syrian state television said communications were lost with his plane at 10:34AM while he was on a training mission near the border with Jordan. Right after he landed, he reportedly removed his Air Force insignia and requested political asylum in Jordan, which the country later granted on 'humanitarian grounds'. There had been other defections and desertions from the Syrian military, but no Syrian Air Force pilots had been known to defect with their aircraft.
An anti-Assad activist reached in Syria, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the pilot flew into Jordan after refusing orders to bomb targets in Syria. A Syrian government paramilitary force known as the Shabiha retaliated by setting fire to the homes of Hamada, his brother and his mother. Opposition sources said he had smuggled his family to Turkey before his defection.
Hamada’s defection raised questions about whether fealty to President Bashar Assad was fraying in the air force, the military branch regarded as closest to the Assad family. Hamada, like most Syrian pilots, belongs to the Sunni Muslim majority so his defection generated speculation that Sunni pilots would face new restrictions on any flying missions. Hamada’s defection also created additional tensions between Jordan and Syria. Syria has demanded the return of the plane and the pilot to Syria from Jordan. Jordan has sought to avoid becoming involved in the conflict in Syria, an important trading partner.