Why did Turkish coup plot fail?
There was little sign of President Recep Erdogan as the plotters took
over buildings and media outlets. They needed to secure the support of
the public and especially the majority of the military.Prime
Minister Binali Yildirim appeared to be leading resistance to the coup,
but as most Turks know, it is President Erdogan who wields the power and
has designs on extending it.If the coup was going to succeed,
the conspirators had to keep him out of the picture and they were unable
to do so. "I am the chief commander," he said later.For hours it was unclear where President Erdogan was. Reports said he
was on holiday at the Aegean resort of Marmaris, deep in Turkey's
south-west.The tide turned when the president flew into Istanbul's Ataturk airport and gave a defiant news conference.The
moment he touched base in Istanbul it was clear the government was
regaining control and had the support of senior military figures.Ankara,
where his palace and the government are based, was not yet secure, but
in Istanbul he was able to address Turkey directly.
It had been "an act of treason and rebellion", he told reporters.
Ilnur Cevik, a senior presidential adviser, told the BBC soon afterwards
that the coup had been defeated by the will of the Turkish population."It's
very clear there was a coup attempt but rapidly the situation turned in
favour of the government and Erdogan asked the people to flock into the
streets in Ankara and Istanbul and that's what they did."It was
the Turkish people who reclaimed Ataturk airport from the military and
the people who took back state TV and radio from the military, he said.
Controlling the message
In reality, the soldiers who took over the studios at TRT had
rebuffed a civilian attempt to force them out, and the coup ringleaders
were able to continue broadcasting their message.A "Peace Council" had taken power and a curfew was in place, they said.
Another broadcaster, CNN Turk, also went off air when soldiers walked
into a studio control room and social media outlets were disrupted.But
the plotters' control of media outlets was not to last and even before
he had arrived at Ataturk airport President Erdogan contacted CNN Turk
and appeared in a video call, urging Turks to take to the streets.The
president may have been lucky. He said the hotel where he had been
staying was bombed after he had left and his secretary general had been
seized.
Did the coup have widespread military support?
For the coup to have succeeded it required backing across the armed
forces. A large number of soldiers may have been involved, and in
several Turkish cities.Tanks took to the streets and the bridge across the Bosphorus in Istanbul was taken over.
But the chief of staff, Gen Hulusi Akar, was not part of the coup,
nor was the head of the army in Istanbul, who took command while Gen
Akar was being held by the plotters.The navy chief and special
forces commander also spoke out against the uprising and F-16 fighter
jets attacked some of the rebel tanks."This attempted coup
collapsed before it even started," said Fadi Hakura of UK-based Chatham
House, who said it was amateurish and failed to attract broad military
support.There was no political or public backing either. The
opposition secular CHP said Turkey had seen enough coups and did not
want "these difficulties repeated". The nationalist MHP also rallied
behind the government.
Who were the plotters?
They are a faction within the army, and military figures say they are
a small group within the First Army, whose headquarters is in Istanbul."They
didn't represent the vast majority of the military," says Fadi Hakura,
who believes their failure is evidence coups no longer enjoy the broad
support they once did in Turkey.Recep Tayyip Erdogan has long
warned against potential coups and in recent years his government has
attempted to purge the military and police of figures it suspects of
agitating against his Islamist-rooted AK Party.
Could it have all been planned in America?
President Erdogan has for years accused a former ally, Fethullah
Gulen, of plotting against him. The pair fell out and Mr Gulen went into
self-imposed exile into the US.And it did not take long for the president to blame "the parallel state", a clear reference to his rival.The
Gulen movement itself denied involvement. A pro-Gulen group said it
found the attempted coup "strange and interesting" but rejected any
attack on democracy, fearing renewed attacks on its movement.However,
the government quickly acted to suspend five generals and 29 colonels
who they said were linked to the "parallel state", Turkish Anadolu news
agency reported.
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