Published at 
https://links.org.au/south-korea-after-president-yoons-failed-self-coup ( 
https://links.org.au/south-korea-after-president-yoons-failed-self-coup )

By Won Youngsu

President Yoon Suk Yeol’s self-coup failed within 153 minutes. Though the 
situation remains volatile, people are safe from the threat of military 
confrontation or repression.

What happened?
--------------

At 10.29pm on December 3, Yoon declared he was imposing martial law, formed a 
military command and sent armed special force troops to occupy parliament and 
arrest key politicians.

But the coup attempt failed.

As parliamentary officials and opposition party staff fought back against the 
coup-plotting soldiers inside parliament, activists and trade unionists 
gathered outside.

By 1.02am on December 4, 190 MPs — including the entire opposition and some 
government MPs — managed to convene an emergency plenary session and 
unanimously vote to repeal martial law.

A few hours later, Yoon accepted defeat and said he would respect parliament’s 
decision. But the question of whether Yoon should resign or be impeached 
remains unresolved.

Still a mystery
---------------

Why did Yoon attempt a self-coup? The president said his intention was to 
remove a “cancer”, namely supposedly pro-North Korean anti-government forces. 
But this is a farcical excuse ( 
https://www.greenleft.org.au/content/south-korea-witnessing-revival-worst-type-cold-war-politics
 ).

What we know is that most of the key military and civilian figures involved in 
the coup attempt were Yoon’s colleagues in high school. Moreover, the number of 
soldiers involved was very small, less than 280.

The poorly written martial law decree revealed how little thought out the 
conspirators’ plan was.

Yoon’s secretaries and ministers quickly resigned, as did his defense minister 
who, having participated in the coup plot, tried to claim responsibility for 
defeating it.

We also know that Yoon and his wife, Kim Keon-hee, have previously exhibited 
bizarre behaviour. In many ways, their marriage resembles a black comedy and 
gossip TV series.

For most of her life, Kim has been a surreal figure, having been involved in 
several financial scams, many orchestrated by her mother, herself a large-scale 
behind the scenes scammer.

Perhaps responsibility for the coup plot lies completely with the couple. The 
reality is that few Koreans understand either of them.

What is more, Yoon is a very poor communicator. In early November, the 
president delivered a speech to the nation in which he was supposed to 
apologise for his wife’s involvement in several scandals. His speech was so 
vague that nobody understood what he was apologising for.

It will take more time to figure out the real motives behind the coup. No doubt 
more information will come out during the trial and punishment of the coup 
plotters.

Division within the ruling party
--------------------------------

With the president seemingly refusing to step down, opposition parties are 
seeking to impeach him.

Back in 2018, South Koreans forced parliament to impeach then-president Park 
Geun-hye ( 
https://www.greenleft.org.au/content/south-korea-mass-movement-scores-big-win-park-geun-hye-impeached
 ) after 134 days of consecutive candlelight protests that together mobilised 
more than 15 million people. Park belonged to a predecessor party that later 
helped form Yoon’s People Power Party (PPP) in 2020.

The ruling right-wing PPP faces a deep crisis. It suffered a huge defeat in the 
April general elections, which left it a minority bloc in parliament.

Despite Yoon hand-picking his close friend Han Dong-hoon to lead the party, the 
PPP is today divided between Yoon and Han supporters.

Yoon’s coup attempt took party leaders by shock, leading Han and 18 other 
government MPs to join with the opposition in repealing martial law.

At first, it also appeared they would support impeachment. But after much 
debate, Han’s faction failed to persuade Yoon’s backers to support impeaching 
the president.

While there was no way the pro-Yoon faction could justify the coup, impeachment 
was a step too far. Many felt impeaching a second president would spell 
political death for the party.

The ruling party’s decision placed the opposition Democratic Party in a 
delicate situation as they required the votes of at least some government MPs 
to obtain the two-thirds majority required for impeachment.

But with public opinion turning on the failed coup leader, the PPP may soon pay 
a very heavy political price for its continuing support of Yoon.

A December 4 survey ( https://www.ekn.kr/web/view.php?key=20241204025071473 ) 
of 504 respondents found 73.6% supported impeachment, with only 24% opposed.

Asked whether Yoon had committed the crime of treason by declaring martial law, 
68.5% answered yes; only 24.9% said no.

The real battle is in the streets
---------------------------------

Given impeachment seems to be blocked, it is now up to the people to step in 
where politicians failed.

Given the self-coup ended quite swiftly, popular mobilisation against it was 
fairly limited. Protests were held inside and outside parliament, as well as in 
Gwanghwamun Square, a symbolic protest site during the 2018 candlelight 
protests.

A huge protest to demand Yoon’s resignation is planned for Seoul this weekend.

The PPP will no doubt become a target of people’s ire should it choose to 
continue supporting Yoon. The ruling right-wing conservatives face an 
existential choice of discarding Yoon or going down in flames with him as a 
political force.

Whatever his intention, Yoon failed to recognise the deep-seated nature of 
people’s decades-long popular resistance to military and civilian 
dictatorships. South Koreans refuse to accept the sight of tanks and troops 
occupying the heart of Seoul.

Yoon’s failed coup has shown that South Korea still has some way to go to 
achieve genuine democracy — and that obtaining this will require further 
democratic revolutions.

Won Youngsu is an activist, Marxist and labour studies researcher. He is the 
Director of Pnyx – Institute of Marxist Studies in Korea.


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