The Karakol Society was founded in November 1918 as the first clandestine organization fighting against the
Allied Occupation of Constantinople. It served as a continuation of the
Committee of Union and Progress' intelligence agency, the
Special Organization, with the majority of its members coming from the latter. It was founded by
Kara Vâsıf Bey and
Kara Kemal on
Talaat Pasha's orders, soon after he fled the country. The name was chosen on the grounds that it was the amalgamation of the founder's names; a secret password (K.G.) was also adopted. Karakol's central committee consisted of Kara Vâsıf Bey, Baha Said Bey, Refik Ismail Bey, Ali Riza Bey (Bebe), Edip Servet Bey (Tör), Kemalletin Sami Bey, and Galatali Sevket Bey. The aims of the organization were outlined as protecting and, where non existent, establishing national unity through legitimate means behind the scenes. Revolutionary action was to be taken in the case of oppressors of freedom and justice. The third article of the declaration of establishment highlighted Karakol's socialist nature. During his stay in Constantinople between November 1918 and May 1919
Mustafa Kemal Atatürk met with
Ali Fethi Bey, Kara Kemal, Ismail Canbulat, and an unknown fourth person, whereupon a revolutionary committee was established. The committee was to assassinate the sultan and overthrow the government, applying pressure on the government that was to succeed it. Canbulat's hesitation temporarily halted the committee's plans, which were later abandoned after its members agreed that the sultan's removal would not be enough to save the crumbling
Ottoman Empire. Mustafa Kemal departed for
Anatolia, which was to become the center of the
Turkish resistance movement. Karakol created a line of communication and transportation between Constantinople and Anatolia, smuggling volunteers, weapons, and armaments into the latter. Karakol representatives took part in the
Erzurum and
Sivas Congresses, where they supported the unification of various resistance organizations under the banner of the
Association for the Defense of the Rights of Anatolia and Rumelia (ADRAR), and Karakol went on to publish the
Amasya Protocol. However a rift soon emerged between the Karakol leadership and Kemal; Karakol refused to accept
Ankara as the center of national resistance and continued to act independently from ADRAR, seeing itself as the real core of the resistance. Kemal became suspicious of Karakol's intentions, ordering it to terminate its activities. ==Downfall==