Coup d'état

'stroke of state'),[1] or simply a coup, is typically an illegal and overt attempt by a military organization or other government elites to unseat an incumbent leadership.[25] What may be its first published use within a text composed in English is an editor's note in the London Morning Chronicle,1804, reporting the arrest by Napoleon in France, of Moreau, Berthier, Masséna, and Bernadotte: "There was a report in circulation yesterday of a sort of coup d'état having taken place in France, in consequence of some formidable conspiracy against the existing government."In the British press, the phrase came to be used to describe the various murders by Napoleon's alleged secret police, the Gens d'Armes d'Elite, who executed the Duke of Enghien: "the actors in torture, the distributors of the poisoning draughts, and the secret executioners of those unfortunate individuals or families, whom Bonaparte's measures of safety require to remove.In what revolutionary tyrants call grand[s] coups d'état, as butchering, or poisoning, or drowning, en masse, they are exclusively employed.Other measures may include annulling the nation's constitution, suspending civil courts, and having the head of government assume dictatorial powers.[37] The term putsch ([pʊtʃ], from Swiss German for 'knock'), denotes the political-military actions of an unsuccessful minority reactionary coup.[2] A number of political science datasets document coup attempts around the world and over time, generally starting in the post-World War II period.A 2023 study argued that major coup datasets tend to over-rely on international news sources to gather their information, potentially biasing the types of events included.[59] A third 2016 study finds that coups become more likely in the wake of elections in autocracies when the results reveal electoral weakness for the incumbent autocrat.A 2017 study found that autocratic leaders whose states were involved in international rivalries over disputed territory were more likely to be overthrown in a coup.The authors of the study provide the following logic for why this is:Autocratic incumbents invested in spatial rivalries need to strengthen the military in order to compete with a foreign adversary.The imperative of developing a strong army puts dictators in a paradoxical situation: to compete with a rival state, they must empower the very agency—the military—that is most likely to threaten their own survival in office.[14][contradictory] In what is referred to as "coup-proofing", regimes create structures that make it hard for any small group to seize power.[87] Succession rules are believed to hamper coordination efforts among coup plotters by assuaging elites who have more to gain by patience than by plotting.[87] According to political scientists Curtis Bell and Jonathan Powell, coup attempts in neighbouring countries lead to greater coup-proofing and coup-related repression in a region.The dataset is small, so statistical significance varies depending on the model used, as of 2017[update]; debate will end if data on more coups makes the pattern clear.[4][5][99][100][101][102][98] The post-Cold-War increase in the chances of post-coup democratization may partly be due to the incentives created by international pressure and financing.Commenting on the 2016 Turkish coup d'état attempt, Somin opined, There should be a strong presumption against forcibly removing a democratic regime.But that presumption might be overcome if the government in question poses a grave threat to human rights, or is likely to destroy democracy itself by shutting down future political competition.[98] However, some tentative analysis by political scientist Jay Ulfelder finds no clear pattern of deterioration in human rights practices in wake of failed coups in post-Cold War era.If it starts the mass killing of elements of the army, including officers who were not involved in the coup, this may trigger a "counter-coup" by soldiers who are afraid they will be next.To prevent such a desperate counter-coup that may be more successful than the initial attempt, governments usually resort to firing prominent officers and replacing them with loyalists instead.[112] A 2016 study shows that the international donor community in the post-Cold War period penalizes coups by reducing foreign aid.[114] A 2017 study found that negative international responses, especially from powerful actors, have a significant effect in shortening the duration of regimes created in coups.
General Napoleon Bonaparte during the Coup of 18 Brumaire in Saint-Cloud , detail of painting by François Bouchot , 1840
Coup contrecoup injuryCoup (disambiguation)Coup d'état (disambiguation)Napoleon BonaparteCoup of 18 BrumaireSaint-CloudFrançois BouchotPolitical revolutionBourgeoisCommunistCounter-revolutionaryDemocraticProletarianColourFrom aboveNonviolentPassivePermanentSocialBoycottCivil disorderCivil warClass conflictContentious politicsDemonstrationHuman chainDirect actionGuerrilla warfareInsurgencyMass mobilizationMutinyProtestRebellionResistanceDisobedienceSamizdatStrike actionTax resistanceTerrorEnglishAtlanticAmericanBrabantLiègeFrenchHaitianSpanish AmericanSerbianBelgianItalian statesFebruaryGermanHungarianEurekaBulgarian unificationPhilippineSecondYoung TurkMexicanXinhaiCultural1917–1923RussianSiameseSpanishAugustGuatemalanHungarian (1956)RwandanNicaraguanArgentineCarnationPeople PowerYogurtVelvetRomanianSingingBolivarianBulldozerOrangeKyrgyzArab SpringTunisianEgyptianYemeniEuromaidanSecond Arab SpringSudanesemilitary organizationleadershipself-coupCold WarauthoritarianismMorning ChronicleNapoleonMoreauBerthierMassénaBernadotteBritish presssecret policeGens d'Armes d'EliteDuke of Enghienlegislatureconstitutionhead of governmentdictatorialautocraciesdemocraciesSoft coupNonviolent revolutionHarem conspiracyImperial ChinaHabsburg dynastyAl-Thani dynastyRussian tsarsSwiss GermanZüriputschWeimar GermanyKapp PutschKüstrin PutschAdolf HitlerBeer Hall PutschNight of the Long KnivesparamilitaryErnst Röhm1961 Algiers putschAugust PutschWagner Group rebellionPronunciamientoConstitutional coupJanuary 6 United States Capitol attackjudiciaryTunisia in 19876 January DictatorshipAlexander I of YugoslaviarevolutionList of coups and coup attemptsList of coups and coup attempts by countryHybrid regimescoordination obstacleseconomic inequalityrents that an incumbent can extractsuccession rulesJournal of Peace ResearchSteven LevitskyPeople's Liberation ArmyChinese Communist PartyChinese Civil WarGreat Leap ForwardCultural Revolutionpeaceful transition of powerdictatorshipsautocraticIlya Somin2016 Turkish coup d'état attemptshutting down future political competitionOttoman countercoup of 19091960 Laotian counter-coupIndonesian mass killings of 1965–661966 Nigerian counter-coup1967 Greek counter-coup1971 Sudanese counter-coupCoup d'état of December TwelfthSouth KoreaMali's 2012 coupAfrican UnionOrganization of American StatesPresidentEmomali RahmonRahmon NabiyevTajikistanTajikistani Civil WarMahdi al-MashatAbdrabbuh Mansur HadiHouthi takeover in YemenPrime MinisterChairman of the State Administration CouncilMin Aung HlaingAung San Suu KyiMyanmar2021 Myanmar coup d'étatCoup BeltTeodoro Obiang Nguema MbasogoFrancisco Macías NguemaEquatorial Guinea1979 Equatoguinean coup d'étatYoweri MuseveniTito OkelloUgandaUgandan Bush WarDenis Sassou NguessoPascal LissoubaRepublic of the Congo Civil WarAbdel Fattah el-SisiMohamed Morsi2013 Egyptian coup d'étatEmmerson MnangagwaRobert MugabeZimbabwe2017 Zimbabwean coup d'étatAbdel Fattah al-BurhanOmar al-Bashir2019 Sudanese coup d'étatChairman of the National Committee for the Salvation of the People of MaliAssimi GoïtaBah Ndaw2021 Malian coup d'étatKais SaiedHichem MechichiTunisia2021 Tunisian self-coupChairman of the National Committee of Reconciliation and DevelopmentMamady DoumbouyaAlpha CondéGuinea2021 Guinean coup d'étatPresident of the Patriotic Movement for Safeguard and RestorationIbrahim TraoréPaul-Henri Sandaogo DamibaBurkina FasoSeptember 2022 Burkinabé coup d'étatPresident of the National Council for the Safeguard of the HomelandAbdourahamane TchianiMohamed Bazoum2023 Nigerien coup d'étatHead of the Committee for the Transition and Restoration of InstitutionsBrice Clotaire Oligui NguemaAli Bongo Ondimba2023 Gabonese coup d'étatAssassinationCivilian-based defenseCivil-military relationsCivilian control of the militaryCoup de mainKleptocracyLeadership spillList of protective service agenciesMilitary dictatorshipPolitical corruptionPolitical warfareSabotageSeven Days in MayState collapseSuccession crisisList of coups and coup attempts since 2010Merriam-WebsterGeddes, BarbaraCaesar's civil warKentish GazetteAkademie VerlagAtlantic CouncilEuractivCharles Scribner's SonsPoliticoCambridge University PressWayback MachineCiteSeerXViking PressMalaparte, Curzioself-coupsby countrysince 2010Mali (1991)Lesotho (1991)Thailand (1991)Soviet Union (1991)Haiti (1991)Georgia (1991–1992)NovemberSierra Leone (1992)Algeria (1992)Sudan (1992)Guatemala (1993)Azerbaijan (1993)Russia (1993)Libya (1993)Burundi (1993)Lithuania (1993)Nigeria (1993)Bophuthatswana (1994)Gambia (1994)Lesotho (1994)Liberia (1994)Cambodia (1994)Azerbaijan (1995)Qatar (1995)São Tomé and Príncipe (1995)Guinea (1996)Paraguay (1996)Iraq (1996)Burundi (1996)Niger (1996)Qatar (1996)Bangladesh (1996)Cambodia (1997)Turkey (1997)Zambia (1997)Guinea-Bissau (1998)Niger (1999)Pakistan (1999)Côte d'Ivoire (1999)Ecuador (2000)Paraguay (2000)Fiji (2000)Solomon Islands (2000)Côte d'Ivoire (2001)Burundi (2001)Haiti (2001)Central African Republic (2001)Venezuela (2002)Côte d'Ivoire (2002)Burkina Faso (2003)Central African Republic (2003)Mauritania (2003)Philippines (2003)Guinea-Bissau (2003)São Tomé and Príncipe (2003)Chad (2004)Sudan (2004)Haiti (2004)Equatorial Guinea (2004)DR Congo (2004)Peru (2005)Nepal (2005)Togo (2005)Mauritania (2005)Chad (2006)Thailand (2006)Madagascar (2006)Fiji (2006)Philippines (2007)Sudan (2008)Mauritania (2008)Guinea (2008)Madagascar (2009)Honduras (2009)Niger (2010)Madagascar (2010)Niger (2011)Guinea-Bissau (2011)Bangladesh (2011)Guinea-Bissau (2012)Sudan (2012)Eritrea (2013)Central African Republic (2013)Chad (2013)Egypt (2013)Libya (2013)Libya (2014)Thailand (2014)Gambia (2014)Yemen (2014–15)Burundi (2015)Burkina Faso (2015)Turkey (2016)Burkina Faso (2016)Libya (2016)Zimbabwe (2017)Yemen (2018)Gabon (2019)Sudan (2019)Ethiopia (2019)Mali (2020)Central African Republic (2021)Myanmar (2021)Niger (2021)Mali (2021)Guinea (2021)Tunisia (2021)SeptemberOctoberJanuaryGuinea-Bissau (2022)São Tomé and Príncipe (2022)Peru (2022)Gambia (2022)Sudan (2023)Niger (2023)Gabon (2023)Burkina Faso (2023)Sierra Leone (2023)Guinea-Bissau (2023)Oyo State, Nigeria (2024)DR Congo (2024)Bolivia (2024)South Korea (2024)