Unfortunately, the Coup Inc and the Multinationals are not the only problems.
There are some for whom the revolution itself is a business opportunity. The revolutionary youth are their market, “vision” is their product, and they are each trying to increase their market share. Maybe with shareholders in the UK, the Khaleej, or Turkey.
In this scenario, as in any business scenario, demand is more important than supply, which means you do not actually deliver effective measures to achieve the goal, because achieving the goal would end the demand for your product.
Thus, you supply the market primarily with rhetoric and incitement, not tactics and strategy, and not effective action. This maintains your position in the market of “revolutionary vision”.
When you have many revolutionary leaders and parties and groups, but no actual revolution, it is wise to wonder why.