, pictured shortly after his seizure of power, on a visit to
Yugoslavia in 1970 In mid-1969, Idris travelled abroad to
Turkey and
Greece during widespread rumors of a coup by the Shalhi brothers on 5 September. Gaddafi's Free Officers recognized this as their chance to overthrow the monarchy before the Shalhi brothers, initiating "Operation Jerusalem". On 1 September 1969, a group of about 70 young army officers from the Free Officers movement and enlisted men mostly assigned to the
Signal Corps usurped the government and abolished the
Kingdom of Libya. The coup started in
Benghazi and was completed in two hours. Army units quickly reassembled in support of the coup and established military control over
Tripoli and in other places across the country within a few days. The Free Officers movement was headed by a twelve-member cabinet that called itself the
Revolutionary Command Council (RCC). This body formed the government after the coup d'état. In its proclamation on 1 September, the Revolutionary Command Council declared the country to be an independent and
sovereign state with the name of the
Libyan Arab Republic, which would continue "in the path of freedom, unity, and social justice, guaranteeing the right of equality to its citizens, and opening before them the doors of honorable work." They characterized the rule of the Turks and Italians and the "reactionary" government which were overthrown as belonging to "dark ages," from which Libyans were called to move forward as "free brothers" to a new age of prosperity, equality, and honor. == Ideology ==