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1972 Moroccan coup attempt

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Failed assassination of King of Morocco Hassan II
1972 Moroccan coup d'état attempt

Hassan's damaged Boeing 727 after the 1972 Airmen's coup attempt
Date16 August 1972
Location
ResultCoup attempt fails
Belligerents
MoroccoGovernment of MoroccoMorocco Coup plotters
Commanders and leaders
KingHassan IIMoroccoMohamed Oufkir 
MoroccoMohamed Amekrane Executed
Casualties and losses
8 killed and 40 wounded

The1972 Moroccan coup attempt was an unsuccessful attempt to assassinate KingHassan II of Morocco on 16 August 1972. The attemptedcoup d'état occurred inMorocco when a rebel faction within the Moroccan military attempted to shoot down an aircraft carrying theKing of Morocco. The attempt was orchestrated by GeneralMohamed Oufkir, a close advisor to King Hassan, and ColonelMohamed Amekrane, commander of the Kenitra Air Base. The coup aimed at overthrowing the monarchy of King Hassan and forming a military regime.[1] On August 16, 6Northrop F-5 jets, acting on General Oufkir's orders, intercepted King Hassan'sBoeing 727 as it returned fromFrance.[2] Reportedly, King Hassan grabbed the radio and told the rebel pilots, "Stop firing! The tyrant is dead!" Fooled, the rebel pilots broke off their attack, believing that their mission had been accomplished.[3]

Eight passengers on the royal jet were killed and forty injured, but the jet was able to land safely at Rabat–Salé Airport.[4]

Background

[edit]
Hassan II, pictured in 1981
Main article:1971 Moroccan coup attempt

The coup occurred a year after another attempted military coup against King Hassan II's regime. Two hundred and fifty rebels based in the Ahermoumou cadet training school attacked the King's palace on his 42nd birthday, killing 91 people and injuring 133.[5]

This article is part of
a series about
Hassan II of Morocco

  • Political offices

  • Policies

  • Military

Oufkir had gained power after the coup in 1971, moving from the Minister of Interior to Minister of Defence. Many had believed he planned the first coup to facilitate this rise.[6]

Attack

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1972 Moroccan coup attempt
TheBoeing 727-2B6 CN-CCG of Royal Air Maroc, repaired and in service in 1989
Incident
DateAugust 16, 1972 (1972-08-16)
SummaryAttempted assassination
SiteOverTétouan,Morocco
Aircraft
Aircraft typeBoeing 727-2B6
OperatorRoyal Air Maroc
RegistrationCN-CCG
Flight originParis–Le Bourget Airport, Paris, France
DestinationRabat–Salé Airport,Salé, Morocco
OccupantsExact number unknown
Fatalities8
Injuries40
SurvivorsExact number unknown

On 16 August 1972, as King Hassan was returning to Morocco from a personal visit to France, fourRoyal Moroccan Air Force pilots, flyingNorthrop F-5 fighter jets, attacked theBoeing 727.[7] It was said that Major Kouera el-Ouafi led this attack;[2][8] the aircraft were from the squadron ofSaleh Hachad.[9] The planes shot holes through the fuselage, killing some passengers. During the attack, Major Kouera el-Ouafi plane's was damaged, and he was forced to bail out; he was captured shortly afterward.[8] One plane broke off, strafing a nearby airfield and killing many on the ground.[10]

One of King Hassan's bodyguards recalls how the pilot, Commander Kabbaj, kept the aircraft safe and operational all while chaos ensued inside of the plane amongst the passengers onboard as well as outside of the plane from the attacking fighter jets.[11] Allegedly, the King himself grabbed the radio and told the rebel pilots, "Stop firing! The tyrant is dead!" Believing their mission to have been accomplished, the rebel pilots broke off their attack.[3]

Eight passengers on the royal jet were killed and forty injured, but the jet was able to land safely at Rabat–Salé Airport.[4]

Aftermath

[edit]

Kenitra Air Base, where most of the rebellious air force officers were based, was surrounded and 220 men were prosecuted, all of whom were officers, non-commissioned officers, and soldiers from the air base.[10] Most of them had only carried out the directives.[12]

The United States foreign relation files showed that the U.S. had emergency evacuation already being planned for their nationals in Morocco. It also showed that at the time no other countries were for or against the attacks other than Libya which publicly supported the rebellious act without lending a helping hand in the attack.[13] General Oufkir was found dead of multiple gunshot wounds later on 16 August, ostensibly from suicide according to the official narrative said to be first because he felt shameful for endangering the King twice but later said to be because he learned the King knew of the betrayal.[14][15] His daughter,Malika Oufkir, claimed, in her autobiographyStolen Lives, that she found bullet wounds all over his body in the liver, lungs, stomach, back and neck.[4] It is likely that Oufkir was executed by generals loyal to Hassan II.[16] Many of his relatives were imprisoned, not being released until 1991, speculated to be because of international criticism for possible human rights abuses.[17] GeneralMohamed Amekrane fled toGibraltar after the coup's failure; he failed to gain asylum and was extradited back to Morocco, where he wasexecuted by firing squad.[18]

Soldiers suspected to have been involved in the coup were put on trial, with many receiving lengthy prison sentences and being sent to secret detention camps. Few of them survived. Furthermore, the regime isolated the military from the political sphere by removing the ranks of defense minister, major general, and deputy major general.[16] The security force was placed under the direct command of the King, and the "Ministry of Defense" was replaced by the "Administration of Defense" and run by a general secretary. When theWestern Sahara War broke out, the Moroccan military was confined to theWestern Sahara, where 50-70% of Moroccan troops remain.[19]

Motives

[edit]

Oufkir's motives behind the coup were unclear. According to some, similarly to the plotters of the1971 Moroccan coup attempt, Oufkir did it to oppose the perceived corruption of the monarchy. Alternatively, it could have been due to him fearing Hassan II intended to remove him, believing that Hassan had attempted to assassinate him in a helicopter accident in Agadir in May 1972. Hassan possibly was suspicious of Oufkir, believing he was implicated in the 1971 coup attempt.[20] Seeing the harsh punishment meted out to his former colleagues and friends, like the televised, execution of ten of the leading plotters, caused relations between Hassan and Oufkir to deteriorate.[21] Furthermore, Oufkir felt threatened by the appointment ofAhmed Dlimi as the new head of national security.[22] Like his motives, Oufkir's intentions for Morocco after the coup were unclear, with some believing he wanted to install aregent with others believing he wanted to establish a republic with the support of Morocco's leftist parties.[20][23]

References

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  1. ^Miller, Susan Gilson (2013-04-15).A History of Modern Morocco. Cambridge University Press. p. 177.ISBN 978-0-521-81070-8. Retrieved2013-05-09.
  2. ^abThe Air Force role in low-intensity conflict. DIANE Publishing. 1986. p. 56.ISBN 1428928278.
  3. ^abGregory, Joseph R. (July 24, 1999)."Hassan II of Morocco Dies at 70; A Monarch Oriented to the West".The New York Times.
  4. ^abcHowe, Marvine (2005-06-30).Morocco: The Islamist Awakening and Other Challenges.Oxford University Press, USA. pp. 111–112.ISBN 978-0-19-516963-8.
  5. ^"1971: Death for Moroccan rebel leaders". BBC. 13 July 1971. Retrieved27 November 2016.
  6. ^Johnson, Peter."General Oufkir's last interview". The Spectator. Retrieved25 November 2016.
  7. ^Ranter, Harro."Unlawful Interference Boeing 727-2B6 CN-CCG, Wednesday 16 August 1972".Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved2025-07-03.
  8. ^ab"Morocco Puts 220 on Trial for Attempt on King Hassan's Life (Published 1972)". 1972-10-18. Retrieved2023-08-03.
  9. ^Naim, Firdaous (Sep 14, 2025)."Morocco Mourns Air Force Pioneer and Tazmamart Survivor Salah Hachad". RetrievedSep 14, 2025.
  10. ^ab"Loyal Troops Seize Airfield". Chicago Tribune. Reuters. 17 August 1972. Retrieved27 November 2016.
  11. ^Rédaction, La."Failed coup of August 16, 1972: the account of King Hassan II's bodyguard".Telquel.ma (in French). Retrieved2025-10-07.
  12. ^Riftime (2019-10-18)."The attack on the plane of the King of Morocco 1972 (part 10)".RifTime. Retrieved2023-08-03.
  13. ^"Historical Documents - Office of the Historian".history.state.gov. Retrieved2025-10-07.
  14. ^Hughes, Stephen O. (2006).Morocco Under King Hassan. Ithaca Press. pp. 173–174.ISBN 0863723128.
  15. ^"Interview with Malika Oufkir". Foreign Correspondent. 7 November 2001. Archived fromthe original on 2008-07-25. Retrieved2013-01-17.
  16. ^abAbouzzohour, Yasmina (2021)."How Do Liberalized Autocracies Repress Dissent? Evidence from Morocco".The Middle East Journal.75 (2):278–279.doi:10.3751/75.2.14.ISSN 1940-3461.S2CID 238800898.
  17. ^"Morocco Frees Coup Leader's Relatives After 18 Years in Jail".LA Times. 2 March 1991. Retrieved20 November 2016.
  18. ^European Convention on Human Rights Year: 1973. Martinus Nijhoff Publishers. 1975. p. 366.ISBN 9024717841. Retrieved25 November 2016.
  19. ^Feliu, Laura; Parejo, Ma Angustias (2013)."Morocco: the reinvention of an authoritarian system". In Izquierdo, Ferran (ed.).Political Regimes in the Arab World: Society and the Exercise of Power.Routledge. pp. 74–75.ISBN 978-0-415-62566-1.
  20. ^abWillis, Michael (2014).Politics and Power in the Maghreb: Algeria, Tunisia and Morocco from Independence to the Arab Spring.Oxford University Press. p. 92.ISBN 978-0-19-936820-4.
  21. ^Maddy-Weitzman, Bruce (2011-05-01).The Berber Identity Movement and the Challenge to North African States.University of Texas Press. pp. 93–94.ISBN 978-0-292-72587-4.
  22. ^Fleet, Kate;Krämer, Gudrun; Matringe, Denis; Nawas, John;Rowson, Everett (eds.)."Oufkir, Muhammad".Encyclopaedia of Islam (3rd ed.). Brill Online.doi:10.1163/1573-3912_ei3_COM_46056.ISSN 1873-9830.
  23. ^Bennani-Chraïbi, Mounia (2022-09-03)."Abderrahmane Youssoufi: an embodiment of the mutations of the Moroccan left".The Journal of North African Studies.27 (5): 914.doi:10.1080/13629387.2020.1855426.ISSN 1362-9387.

External links

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Coups d'état in Africa since 1960
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