That is what boundary layer suction is used for commercial airliners. But to use boundary layer suction to delay flow seperation was the actual purporse of it when founded by the aerodynamic engineer Prandtl himself.Firstly I think the porous section on the back is likely used as a “exhaust”, if you will, of the boundary suction plate on the intake wall, and doesn’t suck BL from the back of the aircraft.
Also if you manually remove BL on the top of the fuselage in a high AoA case the low-pressure region becomes worse no? I’m a bit rusty on aerodynamics but iirc boundary layer suction on fuselage or aerodynamic surfaces is primarily to improve cruise efficiency and not high AoA performance (as laminar flow tends to detach sooner than turbulent flow)
From text Aerodynamics for engineering students chapter 9 Flow Control and Wing Design:
