Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/90496
Title: Coup-proofing in the Middle Eastern and North African (MENA) Region
Other Titles: Oxford research encyclopedia of politics
Authors: Lutterbeck, Derek
Keywords: Military courts -- Middle East
Civil-military relations -- Middle East
Military orders -- Middle East
Issue Date: 2021
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Citation: Lutterbeck, D. (2021). Coup-proofing in the Middle Eastern and North African (MENA) Region. Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics (pp. 1-15). Oxford: Oxford University Press
Abstract: Coup-proofing—that is, measures aimed at preventing military coups and ensuring military loyalty—has been a key feature of civil–military relations in Middle Eastern and North African (MENA) states. Just as the MENA region has been one of the most coup-prone regions in the world, coup-proofing has been an essential instrument of regime survival in Arab countries. The most commonly found coup-proofing strategies in the region include (a) so-called “communal coup-proofing,” involving the appointment of individuals to key positions within the military based on family, ethnic, or religious ties; (b) providing the military with corporate and/or private benefits in order to ensure its loyalty; (c) creating parallel military forces in addition to the regular military, so as to “counter-balance” the latter; (d) monitoring of the military through a vast internal security and intelligence apparatus; and (e) promoting professionalism, and thus political neutrality, within the military. The experiences of the “Arab Spring,” however, have shown that not all of these strategies are equally effective in ensuring military loyalty during times of popular upheavals and regime crises. A common finding in this context has been that communal coup-proofing (or militaries based on “patrimonialism”) creates the strongest bonds been the armed forces and their regimes, as evidenced by the forceful suppression of the popular uprising by the military in countries such as Syria, or by parts of the military in Libya and Yemen. By contrast, where coup-proofing has been based on the provision of material benefits to the military or on counterbalancing, as in Tunisia or Egypt, the armed forces have refrained from suppressing the popular uprising, ultimately leading to the downfall of these countries’ long-standing leaders. A further lesson that can be drawn from the Arab Spring in terms of coup-proofing is that students of both military coups and coup-proofing should dedicate (much) more attention to the increasingly important role played by the internal security apparatus in MENA countries.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/90496
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