One thing surprising – however hardly unprecedented – occurred in South Korea on Dec. 3, 2024. With little warning, President Yoon Suk Yeol declared emergency martial legislation, citing the risk from “pro-North Korean anti-state forces.”
The transfer, which appeared extra about curbing efforts by the primary opposition – the center-left Democratic Celebration – to frustrate Yoon’s coverage agenda by their management of parliament, left many South Koreans surprised. As one Seoul resident advised reporters: “It feels like a coup d’état.”
That interviewee wasn’t far off.
As students of authoritarian politics and authors of the colpus dataset of coup sorts and traits, we now have spent numerous hours documenting the historical past of coups d’état since World Conflict II.
Yoon’s short-lived martial legislation declaration – it lasted only a few hours earlier than being lifted – was an instance of what political scientists name an “autogolpe,” or to provide the phenomenon its English title, a “self-coup.”
Our knowledge exhibits that self-coups have gotten extra frequent, with extra up to now decade in contrast with some other 10-year interval for the reason that finish of World Conflict II. What follows is a primer on why that’s taking place, what self-coups contain – and why, in contrast to in round 80% of self-coups, Yoon’s gambit failed.
The elements of a self-coup
All coup makes an attempt share some traits. They contain an try to seize govt energy and entail a concrete, observable and unlawful motion by navy or civilian personnel.
In an everyday coup, these accountable will try to take energy from an incumbent or presumptive chief. Traditionally, most coups have been perpetrated, or not less than supported, by navy actors. A basic instance is when the Chilean military below Gen. Augusto Pinochet ousted the federal government of Salvador Allende in 1973 and imposed navy rule.
Some coups, nevertheless, are led by leaders themselves.
These self-coups are coups in reverse. Reasonably than the chief of the nation being changed in an unconstitutional method, the incumbent govt takes or sponsors unlawful actions in opposition to different folks within the regime – for instance, the courts or parliament – with the objective of extending their keep in workplace or increasing their very own energy.
This will take the type of a chief govt utilizing troops to close down the legislature, as Yoon tried unsuccessfully to do in South Korea. Others have had extra success; Tunisian President Kais Saied orchestrated a self-coup in July 2021 by dismissing parliament and the judiciary to pave the best way for increasing his presidential energy. Greater than three years on, Saied stays in energy.
Alternatively, a frontrunner could attempt to coerce state officers or the legislature to overturn an election loss. We noticed this occur with Donald Trump after the 2020 U.S. presidential election, and as such we embrace his try to strain native officers – and then-Vice President Mike Pence – to overturn the election end in our checklist of “self-coup attempts.”
The forms of self-coup strategies
However not all govt energy grabs are self-coups. For instance, if a president will get the legislature to increase presidential time period limits and the courts approve – as Bolivian President Evo Morales did in 2017 – this can be a blow to govt constraints and democracy, however we don’t think about it a coup for the reason that process for altering the legislation is constitutional.
In all, we now have recorded 46 self-coups since 1945 by democratically elected leaders within the forthcoming self-colpus dataset, together with the newest try in South Korea. Our self-coup knowledge was compiled over the previous three years with the help of some enterprising undergraduate college students at Carnegie Mellon College.
Reviewing the circumstance – and outcomes – of those incidents helps us determine the commonest traits of self-coups.
Yoon’s actions in South Korea have been typical in some methods however not in others. Over half of self-coup makes an attempt in democratic nations goal the judiciary or the legislature, whereas round 40% explicitly search to undermine democratic elections or stop election winners from taking workplace. The remainder goal different regime elites or a nominal govt.
Yoon declared martial legislation to seize govt energy from an opposition-led legislature.
Curiously, solely 1 / 4 of self-coup makes an attempt in democracies contain such an emergency declaration. Rather more frequent are assaults on opposition events and leaders and election interference.
About 1 in 5 self-coup leaders droop or annul the structure.
Comparatively few self-coup makes an attempt in democracies contain makes an attempt to evade time period limits, although self-coups that end in so-called “leaders for life” have gotten extra frequent in Africa.
Why are self-coups on the rise?
Coups and self-coups are two of the commonest methods democracies die, although their relative frequencies have modified over time.
Whereas coups have been the main reason for democratic breakdown through the Chilly Conflict, self-coups have develop into the main trigger for the reason that fall of the Soviet Union within the early Nineties.
A 3rd of all self-coup makes an attempt by democratically elected leaders since 1946 have occurred in simply the previous decade.
Although extra analysis is required to account for the current rise of self-coups, we consider a part of the reply lies within the decline of anti-coup norms – through which democracies punish coup leaders by withholding recognition, international support or commerce offers – and the rise of personalist politics globally.
Why do self-coups fail?
Presidents and prime ministers who try self-coups presumably assume they’ve likelihood of success – in the event that they didn’t, they wouldn’t try a coup within the first place.
The truth that Yoon launched his self-coup bid seemingly with out prior assist of leaders in his personal occasion could be very uncommon.
Whereas solely half of conventional coup makes an attempt succeed, greater than 4 out of 5 self-coup makes an attempt by democratically elected leaders succeed, in line with our knowledge.
President Alberto Fujimori had the assist of the navy throughout his self-coup of 1992.
Hector Mata/AFP through Getty Photos
So what went unsuitable for Yoon in South Korea?
Coup success is dependent upon coordinating lots of people, together with partisan allies and navy elites. Though overt navy assist of the type Yoon initially acquired is useful, it isn’t all the time decisive.
Most self-coup failures occur when navy and occasion elites defect. The explanations for these defections are likely to contain a mixture of structural and contingent components. When lots of individuals pour into the streets to oppose the coup, like we noticed in Seoul, navy members can get nervous and defect. And worldwide condemnation of the coup can actually assist overturn self-coup makes an attempt.
Public assist for democracy additionally helps. That’s why self-coups don’t sometimes occur in long-established democracies like the USA which have gathered “democratic capital” – the inventory of civic and social belongings that grows with a protracted historical past of democracy.
South Korea, though a navy dictatorship from 1961 to 1987, has had a long time of democratic rule. And the system labored in South Korea when threatened. Celebration leaders united to vote unanimously in opposition to Yoon.
That contrasts with profitable self-coups within the nation by Park Chung-hee in 1972 and Chun Doo-hwan in 1980.
What occurs to failed self-coup leaders?
Not often has a failed self-coup chief remained in workplace for lengthy. The self-coup could make them be ousted in a coup, as occurred to Haiti’s Dumarsais Estimé in Could 1950. Or they might be impeached, as occurred with Peru’s Pedro Castillo in December 2022. In keeping with our knowledge, just one failed self-coup chief managed to hold on to workplace for greater than a yr to the tip of their time period. Although not compelled from workplace after the flawed 1994 Dominican elections, Joaquín Balaguer was compelled to conform to new elections in 1996 through which he wouldn’t be a candidate.
All 190 current members voted to finish martial legislation, together with 18 of 108 members from Yoon’s occasion. Only some extra of the conservative occasion’s legislators must vote in opposition to Yoon for impeachment proceedings to advance.
Threatened by a self-coup, South Korea’s democratic establishments appear to be holding – not less than for now.