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词条 1970 Omani coup d'état
释义

  1. Background

  2. Coup

  3. Aftermath

  4. References

{{Infobox military conflict
| conflict = 1970 Omani coup d'état
| width =
| partof =
| image = File:Oman-map.png
| caption =
| date = 23 July 1970
| place = Salalah, Oman
| coordinates =
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| map_relief =
| latitude =
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| map_size =
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| territory =
| result = Sultan Said bin Taimur deposed
|title=
| status =
| combatants_header =
| combatant1 = {{flagicon|Muscat and Oman|1970}} Sultan Said bin Taimur
| combatant2 = {{flagicon|Oman|1970}} Qaboos bin Said
{{flagicon|Great Britain}} Great Britain
| combatant3 =
| commander1 = Sultan Said bin Taimur
| commander2 = Qaboos bin Said
Brigadier John Graham
Colonel Hugh Oldman
| commander3 =
| units1 =
| units2 =
| units3 =
| strength1 =
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| casualties1 = Sultan lightly wounded
| casualties2 = 1 wounded
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}}

The 1970 Omani coup d'état was the bloodless overthrow of Sultan Said bin Taimur by his son Qaboos bin Said al Said in Oman on 23 July 1970. Occurring in the midst of the Dhofar Rebellion, the palace coup was executed with the support of the British military and saw Sultan bin Taimur deposed and sent into exile to Great Britain. The coup was a pivotal moment in modern Omani history as Sultan Qaboos swiftly set in motion numerous wide-ranging modernization reforms in the kingdom, transforming Oman from a backwater and underdeveloped state into a country on par with many Western nations in terms of peace and economic development. Today, Sultan Qaboos is the longest serving current ruler in the Middle East.

Background

Beginning at the end of the 19th century, Oman gradually came under the influence of the British Empire through a series of treaties and diplomatic arrangements. Eventually, the Sultan became a position increasingly reliant on Britain for support and advice. The kingdom's primary sources of revenue, notably the slave trade and weapons dealing, were inhibited by the British resulting in confrontations between the Kingdom and tribesmen in the country's interior. These confrontations led to Oman seeking military support from the British who pledged to defend Sultan Faisal bin Turki, by now a British puppet, from attempts at toppling him.[1]

In 1913, Sultan Taimur bin Feisal took the reins of Oman and brought back the kingdom to a more stable financial footing and quelled tribal unrest in the country.[2] He ruled until his abdication in 1932 at which point his eldest son Said bin Taimur took over as Sultan.

Under Sultan Said bin Taimur's rule, Oman became increasingly isolationist and anachronistic. Internal unrest flourished such as in the case of the Jebel Akhdar War and Dhofar Rebellion. Sultan bin Taimur became increasingly reliant on the British to maintain control in his own country, which he refused to rule in a modern manner, even refusing to leave his palace after an assassination attempt. The Dhofar Rebellion was a communist insurgency launched in 1963 and had gripped the country since then, pitting British-led Omani troops against the insurgents primarily in the southern part of the country.[3] The Sultan's Armed Forces (SAF) were by and large under the control of British commanders, including Colonel Hugh Oldman, who commanded the Sultan's troops in Muscat, and Brigadier John Graham who was the overall commander of the SAF.[4] By 1970, all of the country's only major source of revenue, petrodollars, was either going to fighting insurgents or directly into the sultan's coffers.[5] Sultan bin Taimur's poor leadership of the country and overreliance on British military support aggravated the British government who began to view Taimur's deposition as the only viable way to defeating Oman's growing communist insurgency and gave way to the 1970 coup.[6] British officials contacted the Sultan's son, Qaboos bin Said al Said, who was under house arrest per his father's orders, by placing voice messages in musical cassette tapes and informed him of the plan the government was concocting to topple his father. Qaboos agreed and the operation proceeded.[7][8]

Coup

On 23 July 1970, Qaboos bin Said al Said, the Sultan's 29-year-old son and graduate of Royal Military Academy Sandhurst, purportedly informed British commanders of his intent to overthrow his father. However, planning for the coup had already been in motion for several weeks before that and British led military units were being put into position to topple the Sultan. Brigadier John Graham convened the top Arab commanders of the Desert Regiment, the main army unit that would carry out the coup, and informed them of the letter sent to them by Qaboos which "commanded" the British officers to carry out the coup. The meeting secured their loyalty and cooperation.

The troops arrived at the al-Husn palace in Salalah, Oman and met no resistance. The tribal sheikh of the five hundred guardsmen entrusted to defend the palace's exterior had been convinced by the British to order his men to stand down prior to the coup. The remainder of the coup was carried out predominantly by Arab troops in order to mask the extent of the involvement of foreigners in the operation. During the coup, Said bin Taimur shot Sheikh Braik Al Ghafri, a coup plotter and son of a prominent Omani governor in the stomach before accidentally shooting himself in the foot as he cocked his pistol. Said bin Taimur managed to briefly escape with a few confidantes and bodyguards down a series of hidden passageways and tunnels but was recaptured quickly. The wounded sultan urged his adviser to send an urgent message to Colonel Hugh Oldman informing him of the events that had transpired but the message was ignored.[9][10] The coup ended when Said bin Taimur signed a document of abdication, handing over the reins of the country to his son, Qaboos. Bin Taimur was flown out of the country on a Royal Air Force Bristol Britannia first to Bahrain for medical treatment and then on to London where he lived the remaining two years of his life in a suite in The Dorchester, a luxury hotel.[11][12]

Aftermath

Sultan Qaboos bin Said al Said immediately set on his priorities of modernizing the country and defeating the insurgency in the newly renamed Sultanate of Oman's interior. Prior to taking the throne, Oman had no secondary schools, only one hospital, and ten kilometers of paved roads.[13] He redirected the country's oil revenue to economic initiatives, moving the country away from subsistence farming and fishing, and building modern infrastructure. Schools were built, the country was electrified, numerous roads were built, and Western journalists stopped the practice of labeling the country "medieval". Slavery was banned, and by 1975 the insurgency in the country had been suppressed in an international effort. By 1980, Oman had 28 hospitals, 363 schools, and 12,000 kilometers of paved roads.[14] In addition, the Majlis Al-Shura was established which has the power to review legislation and call government ministers to meet with them. Internal unrest in Oman has successfully ended owing to an initiative by Qaboos to include all ethnic and tribal groups into the administration of the country and granting amnesty for former rebels.[15][16] Bin Taimur died in 1972 in London and Sultan Qaboos continues to rule Oman.

The success of the Dhofar Rebellion which was proving to be a formidable challenge for Oman and a growing existential threat to the British backed government was reversed with the removal of Taimur. Sultan Qaboos launched a concerted £400 million effort to modernize the Omani military, even creating a navy to protect the country's oil exports. The communist rebels gradually lost their foreign support bases in the Soviet Union and the People's Republic of China after a string of military defeats. This, coupled with mounting international opposition to the rebellion including the deployment of Iranian troops in 1973 led to a final defeat of the rebels in 1975.[17]

The involvement of the British government as a whole in the coup was denied for forty years with the official narrative being the coup was carried out predominantly by Arab troops with their British commanders taking part on personal initiative. In fact, the coup had been planned by MI6, the Foreign Office, and the Ministry of Defence and given the go-ahead by British Prime Minister Edward Heath.[18] In fact contingency planning of the event showed that Qaboos would have been kept under the protection of British troops then flown out of the country should the coup have failed.[19]

References

1. ^{{cite web | last=Author | first=the | title=A Close Relationship: Britain and Oman since 1750 | website=Qatar Digital Library | date=2014-12-11 | url=https://www.qdl.qa/en/close-relationship-britain-and-oman-1750 | access-date=2018-01-18}}
2. ^{{cite web | title=7. Oman (1912-present) | website=UCA | url=http://uca.edu/politicalscience/dadm-project/middle-eastnorth-africapersian-gulf-region/oman-1912-present/ | access-date=2018-01-18}}
3. ^{{cite web | last=Pike | first=John | title=The Insurgency In Oman, 1962-1976 | website=GlobalSecurity.org | date=2018-01-17 | url=https://www.globalsecurity.org/military/library/report/1984/CSA.htm | access-date=2018-01-18}}
4. ^{{cite book|author=I. Skeet|title=Oman: Politics and Development|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CUiBDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA35|date=2 June 1992|publisher=Palgrave Macmillan UK|isbn=978-0-230-37692-2|pages=35–}}
5. ^{{cite web | last=Pike | first=John | title=The Insurgency In Oman, 1962-1976 | website=GlobalSecurity.org | date=2018-01-21 | url=https://www.globalsecurity.org/military/library/report/1984/CSA.htm | access-date=2018-01-21}}
6. ^{{cite book|author=James J. Worrall|title=State Building and Counter Insurgency in Oman: Political, Military and Diplomatic Relations at the End of Empire|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Vw9gAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA292|date=18 December 2013|publisher=I.B.Tauris|isbn=978-1-84885-634-9|pages=292–}}
7. ^{{cite book|author=Tony Geraghty|title=Black Ops: The Rise of Special Forces in the CIA, the SAS, and Mossad|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yCBbBAAAQBAJ&pg=PT24|date=12 March 2012|publisher=Pegasus Books|isbn=978-1-60598-761-3|pages=24–}}
8. ^Jones, Ridout, Jeremy, Nicholas (2015). A History of Modern Oman. Cambridge University Press. p. 146.
9. ^{{cite book | last=Ling | first=C. | title=Sultan In Arabia: A Private Life | publisher=Mainstream Publishing | year=2011 | isbn=978-1-84596-831-1 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PCm45OHcDSoC&pg=PT28 | language=eu | access-date=2018-01-21 | page=28}}
10. ^{{cite web | last=Schmidt | first=Dana Adams | title=Coup in Oman: Out of Arabian Nights Into 20th Century | website=The New York Times | date=1970-09-05 | url=https://www.nytimes.com/1970/09/05/archives/coup-in-oman-out-of-arabian-nights-into-20th-century.html | access-date=2018-01-18}}
11. ^{{cite book|author=Abdel Razzaq Takriti|title=Monsoon Revolution: Republicans, Sultans, and Empires in Oman, 1965-1976|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=AwbnDAAAQBAJ&pg=PT198|date=25 August 2016|publisher=OUP Oxford|isbn=978-0-19-251561-2|pages=198–}}
12. ^https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/1557161/Brigadier-Tim-Landon.html
13. ^{{cite book | last=Limbert | first=M. | title=In the Time of Oil: Piety, Memory, and Social Life in an Omani Town | publisher=Stanford University Press | year=2010 | isbn=978-0-8047-5626-6 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SgqwwBRc4eQC&pg=PA6 | access-date=2018-01-18 | page=6}}
14. ^{{cite book | last=Limbert | first=M. | title=In the Time of Oil: Piety, Memory, and Social Life in an Omani Town | publisher=Stanford University Press | year=2010 | isbn=978-0-8047-5626-6 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SgqwwBRc4eQC&pg=PA4 | access-date=2018-01-18 | page=4}}
15. ^{{cite web | last=Vaidya | first=Sunil K. | last2=Chief | first2=Bureau | title=Oman's Sultan Qaboos gives larger role to Shura | website=GulfNews.com | date=2011-10-21 | url=http://gulfnews.com/news/gulf/oman/oman-s-sultan-qaboos-gives-larger-role-to-shura-1.910984 | access-date=2018-01-18}}
16. ^{{cite web | title=A Test for Oman and Its Sultan | website=The New Yorker | date=2014-12-08 | url=https://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/will-oman-survive-sultan | access-date=2018-01-18}}
17. ^{{cite web | last=Pike | first=John | title=The Insurgency In Oman, 1962-1976 | website=GlobalSecurity.org | date=2018-01-21 | url=https://www.globalsecurity.org/military/library/report/1984/CSA.htm | access-date=2018-01-21}}
18. ^{{cite web | last=Cobain | first=Ian | title=Britain’s secret wars | website=the Guardian | date=2016-09-08 | url=https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2016/sep/08/britains-secret-wars-oman | access-date=2018-01-18}}
19. ^{{cite web | title=Britain’s coup in Oman, 1970 | website=Mark Curtis | date=2016-02-06 | url=http://markcurtis.info/2016/02/06/britains-coup-in-oman-1970/ | access-date=2018-01-21}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:1970 Omani coup d'etat}}

4 : History of Oman|1970s coups d'état and coup attempts|July 1970 events|1970 in Oman

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