Omar Suleiman (born July 2, 1936, Qinā, Egypt—died July 19, 2012, Cleveland, Ohio) was an Egyptian intelligence official who served as the director of the Egyptian General Intelligence Service (EGIS; 1993–2011) and briefly served as vice president of Egypt under Pres. Ḥosnī Mubārak in early 2011, becoming the first person to serve as vice president in Mubārak’s nearly three-decade presidency. During his tenure as director of EGIS, Suleiman, a close ally of Mubārak, emerged as one of the most powerful figures in Egypt, handling important diplomatic assignments and developing close relationships with Western intelligence agencies.
Suleiman was born in the Upper Egyptian town of Qinā in 1936. He graduated from the Egyptian Military Academy in Cairo as an infantry officer and received further military training in the Soviet Union. He participated in the third Arab-Israeli war in 1967 and the fourth Arab-Israeli war in 1973. He received military training in the United States in the 1980s, after Egypt began to receive extensive military aid from the United States following the conclusion of a peace treaty between Egypt and Israel. In 1986 Suleiman became the deputy head of military intelligence in Egypt.
In 1993, as the security services fought to defeat a violent Islamist insurgency in Egypt, he was appointed director of EGIS. As director, Suleiman was entrusted with a portfolio that included foreign intelligence-gathering operations, counterterrorism, and protection for officials. Suleiman was credited with foiling an attempt on Mubārak’s life during a visit to Ethiopia in 1995 by persuading him to ride in an armoured limousine while on the visit. Militants did open fire on the president’s car in Addis Ababa, but the armour prevented any harm to Mubārak.
As he became established as one of Mubārak’s most trusted advisers, Suleiman began to take on important diplomatic assignments. The Egyptian government made his identity public in 2001, breaking with the usual practice of keeping the identities of EGIS directors secret. His highest-profile diplomatic assignments dealt with the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, where he worked to broker agreements between Israel and the Palestinians as well as between rival Palestinian factions. Suleiman also worked closely with Western intelligence agencies, especially in tracking and fighting Islamist militant groups.
In January 2011 protests against political repression, corruption, and poverty erupted in Egypt, threatening the stability of the Mubārak regime. Mubārak, who had ruled for nearly 30 years without officially naming a deputy, appointed Suleiman vice president of Egypt on January 29. On February 11, amid continuing protests, Suleiman appeared on Egyptian television to announce that Mubārak had stepped down as president and that governing authority would be transferred to the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, a group of senior military officers. The transition left Suleiman without a position in the government, and he did not make further public appearances after Mubārak left office. Later that month the Egyptian government confirmed that Suleiman had survived an assassination attempt on February 4, a week before Mubārak left office, when unknown gunmen opened fire on his vehicle in Cairo.
In April 2012 Suleiman declared himself a candidate in Egypt’s upcoming presidential election, scheduled for May and June 2012. His entry into the race was decried by Islamists and liberals who saw him as being too closely associated with the Mubārak regime. Days after announcing his candidacy, Suleiman was disqualified from running by Egypt’s presidential election commission, which charged that he had failed to acquire the 30,000 petition signatures required to enter the race.
Suleiman died unexpectedly in July 2012 while receiving medical care in the United States.