Jump to content

Coup of 25 November 1975

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from 25 de Novembro)

The Coup of 25 November 1975 (usually referred to as the 25 de Novembro in Portugal) was a military movement led by parts of the Portuguese Armed Forces, whose outcome would later lead to the end of the Ongoing Revolutionary Process (PREC) and to a stabilization process of the representative democracy in Portugal.

On November 12, 1975, there was a protest with tens of thousands of workers and that surrounded the São Bento Palace for two days. With the refusal of the Ministry of Labor to meet with them, the protests radicalized, and was mobilized against the VI Provisional Government, that suspended functions on the 20th. In the morning of the 25th, Vasco Lourenço is declared commander of the Lisbon Military Region (RML) by the Revolutionary Council (CR). There were movements of the paratroopers of the Paratroopers' Regiment, that quickly occupied various air bases, as well as the Air Force General Staff, of the Lisbon Artillery Regiment (RALIS), that, shortly after, set up a military apparel in many places, and the troops of the Practical School of Military Administration (EPAM), that occupied the studios of Rádio e Televisão de Portugal and took control of the tolls on the northern highway. At around 7 AM, the paratroopers occupied the 1st Air Region and arrested the commander. Here, the President is told that "the 'coup' is on the street". It's still not possible to outline with precision the profile of the different groups in the movement.

The Group of Nine went to Belém, and President Costa Gomes, that had an undisputed role in the following hours, took the lead. The precautionary measures lead to popular demobilization, in a time where the public was starting to surround various military points, what could lead to weapon distribution. Otelo Saraiva de Carvalho, previously missing, came back to Belém, where he also had a key role. Costa Gomes decreed the state of siege in the RML at 4:30 PM. During the day, there were attempts by the sublevados (insurgents) to reverse the situation, unfavorable to them, and offensives by the moderados (moderates). On the 26th, the CR decided to dissolve the COPCON, and demanded the presence of all its commanders in the Belém Palace. During the day, the sublevados continued to lose positions, and the situation started to normalize. Besides the dozen of officials already imprisoned in Custóias, COPCON officials were jailed there. In the following day, 'victory' was mentioned, even though the winner wasn't known.

According to the historian Maria Inácia Rezola, "[...] it's still one of the most controversial episodes, in some aspects, hazy of Portuguese Revolutionary Process".[1] There is a consensus in Portuguese historiography that the military movements were caused by the exit of the paratroopers, and that, according to its protagonists, the events aren't based in a simple corporate claim. However, there's isn't a consensus if there was or not a state coup, and who the perpetrators were.[1] There's also a lack of consensus in many other matters, which are caused by the lack of response to the question of who ordered the paratroopers to leave: as an example, if it was a state coup or if it was an action done to clarify the political-military situation; how many military plans there were; how to explain the behavior of Otelo Saraiva de Carvalho and those part of the CR, the Portuguese Communist Party's (PCP) behavior, and that of the President Francisco Costa Gomes.[2]

Events

[edit]

The political, economic, and social crisis in post-Carnation Revolution Portugal, a period known as PREC, and the make-up of The Constituent Assembly, the first democratically elected organ after the fall of the previous regime, gave rise to serious confrontations during what became known as the Hot Summer of 1975. This marked the start of the counter-revolutionary movement. This caused a division in the Armed Forces Movement which had been responsible for the overthrowing of the Estado Novo regime. It was the coup on 25 November 1975, followed by a counter-coup led by Ramalho Eanes, a pro-democracy moderate (and supported by moderate socialist Mário Soares), that re-established the democratic process.

25 of November

[edit]

On this day, dissident paratroopers tried to seize military complexes across the country,[3] in a coup attempt that was easily defeated by commandos loyal to the government.[3][4] With the country engulfed in political chaos, some hundreds of military personnel sympathetic to the extreme left seized the Monsanto Air Base, the Air Force School, and five other air bases in the capital and in the south of Portugal.[5]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Reis, António; Rezola, Maria Inácia; Santos, Paula Borges, eds. (2016). Dicionário de história de Portugal: o 25 de Abril (1a edição ed.). Porto: Figueirinhas. p. 42. ISBN 978-972-661-222-3.
  2. ^ Reis, António; Rezola, Maria Inácia; Santos, Paula Borges, eds. (2016). Dicionário de história de Portugal: o 25 de Abril (1a edição ed.). Porto: Figueirinhas. pp. 42–43. ISBN 978-972-661-222-3.
  3. ^ a b Lochery, Neill (2017). "SOS". Out of the Shadows: Portugal from Revolution to the Present Day. London, England: Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 27–28. ISBN 978-1472934208.
  4. ^ Gilbert, Mark (2014). "Resentful Allies". Cold War Europe: The Politics of a Contested Continent. Lanham, Maryland, USA: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. pp. 220–222. ISBN 978-1442219847.
  5. ^ Falcão, Catarina (24 November 2015). "25 de Novembro. O fim da revolução, mas só para alguns". Observador (in Portuguese). Retrieved 25 November 2017.