Journalist Erkam Tufan Aytav marked the third anniversary of Turkey’s July 15, 2016 coup attempt with a special program examining what he described as the unresolved questions, contradictions and political consequences of the failed putsch.
One of the central issues discussed was President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s statement that he first learned of the coup attempt from his brother-in-law. Critics of Ankara’s account have long pointed to that remark as a key question in the official timeline, arguing that Turkey’s intelligence and security institutions should have informed the president earlier if they had received warnings during the day.
The program also challenged what it described as the claim that the National Intelligence Organization did not inform Erdoğan. It argued that ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) organizations appeared to have been aware of developments earlier than the public was told.
Aytav also questioned the framing of the coup attempt around the Gülen movement, a transnational civic initiative inspired by Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen. Ankara designates the movement as a terrorist organization and blames it for Turkey’s 2016 coup attempt. The movement denies involvement.
According to the program description, the question of where the movement stood in relation to July 15 was not meaningful in the way Ankara presented it. The episode instead pointed to broader networks, political interests and factions that critics say should be examined to understand how the night unfolded.
The broadcast also referred to nationalist-secularist cadres and raised the claim that such groups could one day seek to put Erdoğan on trial, reflecting the program’s broader argument that the alliances formed after the coup attempt may not remain stable indefinitely.
The video below presents Aytav’s third-anniversary discussion on the official account of July 15, Erdoğan’s claim that he learned of the coup from his brother-in-law, the role of intelligence agencies and the unanswered questions that continue to surround the failed putsch.





