1981 Spanish coup attempt

A coup d'état was attempted in Spain in February 1981 by elements of the Civil Guard and the Spanish military. The failure of the coup marked the last serious attempt to revert Spain to Francoist government and served to consolidate Spain's democratization process. King Juan Carlos I played a major role in foiling the coup, and the monarchy emerged with renewed legitimacy as a result.

1981 Spanish coup d'état attempt
Part of the Spanish transition to democracy

Antonio Tejero bursting into the Plenary Chamber of the Congress of Deputies, gun in hand
Date23–24 February 1981
Location
Madrid and Valencia, Spain
Result

Coup failed

  • Preservation of the constitutional order
  • Twelve members of the Spanish Armed Forces, seventeen Civil Guards, and one civilian sentenced to prison for military rebellion by the Superior Council of Military Justice
  • Successful investiture of Leopoldo Calvo Sotelo as Prime Minister of Spain
  • Initial dispensational sustenance and thereupon, decisive consolidation of democratic rule in Spain
Belligerents

Kingdom of Spain

  • Civil Guard (main branch)
  • Spanish Armed Forces
    (all branches except the
    Captaincy General of Valencia)
  • National Police Corps
  • CESID
Supported by:
EEC

Neo-Francoist rebels

  • Spanish Armed Forces
    (Captaincy General of Valencia)
  • Civil Guard (rebels)
Commanders and leaders
Strength
All of the Spanish military and police corps except for the rebels 1,800 men (in Valencia)
200 Civil Guards (in Madrid)
Dozens of tanks and other military vehicles
Casualties and losses
None

The coup began on 23 February 1981 when Lieutenant-Colonel Antonio Tejero, along with 200 armed Civil Guard officers, stormed the Congress of Deputies chamber in Madrid during a vote to swear in Leopoldo Calvo-Sotelo as President of the Government. The officers held the parliamentarians and ministers hostage for 18 hours, during which the King denounced the coup in a public television broadcast, calling for rule of law and the democratic government to continue. The royal address fatally undermined the coup, and the hostage-takers surrendered the next morning and all deputies were freed. A simultaneous coup attempt, executed by Captain General Jaime Milans del Bosch in Valencia, also failed. Tejero, Milans del Bosch and a third conspirator, General Alfonso Armada, were sentenced to thirty years in prison. In 1988 the Spanish Supreme Court suggested to pardon Alfonso Armada and Tejero; the government of Felipe Gonzalez pardoned the former.

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