THE PHILIPPINES: Prospective military coups are usually discussed in conspiratorial whispers, but it's hard to miss the chatter in Manila these days that Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo soon might become the latest in a string of Philippine presidents removed from office at the point of a gun.
Rumours of a coup circle like vultures over this chaotic capital. The speculation is heard on prime time TV and swapped in text messages between politicians, exchanged in flashy hotel bars where business people gather and along stalls in street markets. Some opposition politicians clamour for a coup. Others doubt the soldiers are ready to strike - at least just yet.
But everyone wonders, should it come, if a coup will succeed and at what cost in blood.
"You walk past a coffee shop and you can almost see the bubbles rising from the gossip," says Rex Robles, a retired naval commodore whose personal involvement with coups includes the successful overthrow of Ferdinand Marcos in 1986 and jail time for, as he says, "let's just say three and leave it at that" failed attempts to topple Corazon Aquino.
"You can't keep anything secret here," Robles says. "The problem is not a lack of information but information overload. And that makes it harder to separate what's fact from fiction."
After two decades of coups and attempted coups co-existing with a bumptious democracy, Filipinos have acquired a certain stoicism about the prospect of the military intervening yet again.
It was the armed forces' withdrawal of support that sealed the fates of Presidents Marcos and then Joseph Estrada in 2001.
The legacy of those coups is a belief among many military officers that they have a legal right to act under their constitutional role as the "protectors of the people and state" against rogue politicians.
Many people argue that this state of crisis has been reached again, with Arroyo's administration crippled by allegations of rampant financial corruption and claims she rigged the elections that returned her in 2004.
Wiretaps leaked in June suggest Arroyo called a member of the elections commission 15 times during the tally of vote totals from each province. She has acknowledged only a "lapse in judgment" in phoning an election commissioner to "protect" her votes.
Arroyo has refused to resign, challenging her opponents to impeach her if they can. That process is set to begin in congress this week but there is profound frustration among opponents at what they regard as Arroyo's stalling tactics as the country slides into deeper economic despair.
"Somebody has to take her out if she won't go," said Ike Seneres, a former ambassador who was an Arroyo adviser until a few weeks ago when he bolted to the opposition. "The armed forces of the Philippines has to take her out. Do they not have a sense of smell? This government stinks and they have not done anything."
Seneres made his plea on Thursday at the launch of an umbrella of opposition forces under the banner of a caretaker council, which aims to govern if Arroyo is forced from office until fresh elections can be held.
Opposition politicians have not been able to rally around an alternative leader, and many observers see the council as an attempt to create a civilian body capable of accepting a handover of power from the military should it move against Arroyo.
If a coup does come, no one will be able to claim surprise. Arroyo and her dwindling band of supporters clearly are aware of the risk, repeatedly demanding that Filipinos stick to constitutional methods in trying to remove her.
"No to Junta, Yes to Democracy" reads a government banner strung across a major bridge that leads toward the president's Malacanang palace.
The top commanders of the police and armed forces publicly have pledged to remain neutral. But the threat of a coup comes from armed forces junior officers who are regarded as idealistic, nationalistic and appalled by what they see as corruption extending into the upper reaches of the Philippine military itself.
These officers have some backing from retired generals who have gone public with laments for the current state of the military. "I did not join the armed forces of the Philippines to become rich, although I realise now that some of my colleagues have become wealthy beyond anyone's wildest dreams," retired Gen Ramon Farolan, former head of the air force, wrote in the Philippine Daily Inquirer last week.
"Today we are being urged by our superiors to remain neutral and stay out of politics. Didn't someone say that the hottest places in hell are reserved for those who in times of crisis remain fence-sitters?"
The junior officers are further alienated from the top brass by revelations that the tapes of Arroyo's alleged election fraud include segments implicating four generals in vote rigging. Only under the threat of mass resignations from junior officers did the armed forces announce this week they would investigate the charges of military collusion in the scandal.
A shiver of interest also greeted publication on Friday of a fiery call for a coup, allegedly from soldiers belonging to the Young Officers Union, or YOU, a group behind the relentless attempts to overthrow Aquino.
The manifesto was immediately dismissed as a fraud by the armed forces, largely on the basis that it was written in well-composed English believed to be beyond the grasp of Philippine soldiers.
Officially, YOU has been out of business since 1995 when it struck a formal deal with then President Fidel Ramos to stop its attacks on the government. Many of its members have since risen in the ranks or retired, and there is a widespread belief that the shadowy group no longer even exists.
But whatever the unhappy junior officers call themselves these days, they have unsettled people in the establishment who still wants a democratic resolution to the impasse.
"Because of the Marcos experience, many military officers acquired the code that they can judge a government, and the Estrada revolt reinforced the belief that they have a right to replace a government," says Senator Rodolfo Biazon, a one-time chief of staff who defended the Aquino government against seven coup attempts.
Biazon has gravitated since from the military into politics. But he recently met frustrated young officers, including colonels and one-star generals, and encouraged them to stand back and let the politicians sort out the current troubles. "That right to judge, to replace a government, does not belong to the man with the gun. It belongs to the people," the former soldier said.
"That's why I have been talking to these officers: we cannot allow this interference in politics to happen again. But the soldiers see the difficulties being suffered by the people here, the economic injustice, the social injustice, the corruption. It should not be a political dilemma for the military about whether to act," Biazon s. "But the reality is, it is."