On the night of July 15–16, 2016, a faction of the Turkish military seized the Bosphorus bridges, bombed the Grand National Assembly, and flew F-16s over Ankara in an attempt to overthrow President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan. Approximately 250 civilians died defending democratic institutions after Erdoğan's televised FaceTime call urged citizens into the streets. The Turkish government attributed the coup to the Gülen movement (designated FETÖ), demanded the extradition of Fethullah Gülen from the United States (denied), and launched mass purges dismissing or arresting over 150,000 people. A minority of independent analysts — notably economist Dani Rodrik — raised unanswered questions about pre-coup intelligence and Erdoğan's foreknowledge, generating a contested alternative framing. The coup itself is confirmed; the attribution of orchestration solely to FETÖ with possible US support remains contested.