What Makes a Coup Succeed? Confidence, Consensus and a Sense of Inevitability - News Summed Up

What Makes a Coup Succeed? Confidence, Consensus and a Sense of Inevitability


To understand what makes a coup succeed, as recently happened in Sudan and Algeria, or fail, as it did this week in Venezuela, it helps to consider the strange events in Libya a half-century ago. For much of 1969, the county was filled with rumors of an imminent coup. In September, a handful of military vehicles rolled up to government offices and communication centers, and a terse statement announced the end of Libya’s decrepit monarchy. Army units around the country, assuming that military chiefs were leading the coup and expecting them to show up at any moment, bloodlessly secured the rest of Libya. A week later, an unknown 27-year-old army signal corps lieutenant announced that he and a few dozen low-level officers had in fact staged the coup.


Source: International New York Times May 02, 2019 21:56 UTC



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