On the 10th anniversary of the July 15, 2016, coup attempt, Turkish security sources have revealed that the widely circulated “controlled coup” narrative was a meticulously crafted contingency plan orchestrated by the Gülenist Terror Group (FETÖ). Designed to deflect accountability for an insurrection that claimed 253 lives, this disinformation scheme aimed to rebrand the failed putsch as a government-staged event. For decades prior, FETÖ had systematically infiltrated the Turkish state, with leader Fetullah Gülen notoriously valuing military assets over educational expansion as part of a long-term scheme to subvert national institutions.
The primary impetus for the 2016 coup was the Turkish government’s growing success in identifying and purging FETÖ infiltrators. Facing imminent expulsion during the August 2016 Supreme Military Council (YAŞ) meeting, the group accelerated its plans, attempting to hijack the state to prevent their own dismantling. Having previously utilized compromised elements in law enforcement and the judiciary to launch anti-graft probes and attacks on intelligence leadership in 2013, the organization was already well-versed in destabilization tactics. When the public defied the soldiers on the night of July 15, FETÖ immediately activated its “Plan B” to rewrite the historical record.
The mastermind behind this disinformation campaign was Enver Altaylı, a former intelligence officer with extensive historical ties to foreign agencies and FETÖ’s senior leadership. Investigations revealed that Altaylı, who maintained deep links to fugitive military officers, operated as a bridge between the group’s inner circle and international actors. According to security findings, Altaylı managed a network aimed at disseminating the “controlled coup” narrative, creating reports such as “A Search For Truth.” This document, eventually published by a FETÖ-affiliated platform, became the foundation for international propaganda intended to legitimize the claim that the coup was a staged political maneuver.
The impact of this narrative extended into the highest levels of Turkish domestic politics. The Republican People’s Party (CHP), led at the time by Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, notably endorsed and amplified the “controlled coup” claims. By refusing to join the broader national front against the putschists and repeatedly suggesting that the government was complicit in the uprising, political opposition figures inadvertently provided a shield for the architects of the violence. Experts and government sources maintain that this political validation represents a profound failure of judgment that historians and the Turkish public continue to condemn as an exploitation of national tragedy.
Beyond the “controlled coup” myth, investigations into Altaylı’s records uncovered a pattern of systemic sabotage against the Turkish state. This included operational roles in the 2013 Gezi Park riots and the “MIT trucks” case, which sought to frame Türkiye as a supporter of the terrorist group Daesh. Documents recovered from Altaylı’s possession, described as a “bloody chaos plan,” detailed a strategy to incite civil conflict, engineer economic collapse, and leverage international pressure against the government. These notes, some prepared months before the 2016 putsch, highlighted a commitment to inducing systemic instability and state-level collapse.
Ten years later, the “controlled coup” label stands as a stark example of how, in the digital age, a sophisticated terror organization can weaponize information to invert reality. With the sentencing of key figures like Altaylı in 2021, the legal and historical record has consistently reaffirmed that the attempt was a brutal, unilateral effort by FETÖ to seize control. For the Turkish state, the memory of July 15 serves not only as a defense of constitutional order but as a lesson in the dangers of deep-seated organizational infiltration and the enduring necessity of counter-disinformation to protect national sovereignty.


