The Montreux Convention: Turkey’s strategic custodianship of the Straits
Journal article
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3200366Utgivelsesdato
2025-06Metadata
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- IFS Insights [99]
Sammendrag
• The Montreux Convention is one key instrument
that Turkey applies to alleviate sudden geopolitical
shifts in the Black Sea and the wider Black Sea
region.
• Closing the Turkish Straits most likely saved
Odessa in the early stages of Russia`s full-scale
invasion of Ukraine.
• The Turkish authorities’ decision to close the straits,
not only to the belligerent parties, but to all naval
ships, has weakened NATO`s surveillance and de terrence capabilities in the Black Sea.
• Russian commercial ships, not banned by the
Convention, are carrying military cargo, defence
Takeaways
exports and weapons from Baltic ports to
Novorossiysk.
• Knowledge about The Montreux Convention and
the Turkish custodianship is critical to Norway`s
effort to support the Ukrainian Navy, as part of
the Nansen Support Program and to the Maritime
Capability Coalition for Ukraine that Norway leads
together with the UK.
• Leading up to the Russian full-scale invasion of
Ukraine, NATO’s last non-local warship, the FS
Auvergne left the Black Sea not to be replaced by
another NATO naval ship. This raises the question
whether NATO really would have deployed naval
forces to the Black Sea had the Straits been closed
only to Ukraine and Russia.