Turkey wants to be neutral in the Ukraine war. But a treaty from 1936 has it on a tightrope

Turkey wants to be neutral in the Ukraine war. But a treaty from 1936 has it on a tightrope


A Russian submarine passes Istanbul as it transits the Bosporus in February 2022. Turkey is the gatekeeper between the Black Sea and the Mediterranean.

Ozan Kose | Afp | Getty Images

There’s a Turkish saying, “Did your ships sink in the Black Sea?” The expression is asked when a person is lost in thought, trying to resolve a seemingly unsolvable problem.

As it turns out, that’s the very body of water that has Turkey on a geopolitical tightrope since Russia invaded Ukraine and began military operations from those waters — because Turkey controls access to the Black Sea.

After Turkey’s War of Independence officially ended with the Lausanne Treaty in 1923, the straits of Bosporus and Dardanelles were demilitarized. Access to and from the Black Sea into the Mediterranean was brought under the control of an International Straits Commission.

But with the political situation deteriorating in Europe ahead of World War II, Turkey sought to change the agreement and negotiated the Montreux Convention in 1936. To this day, Turkey’s control of the straits between Europe and Asia gives it a unique maritime power.

The Bosporus and Dardanelles are the only water routes in or out of the Black Sea. That gives Turkey influence over how Russia’s navy can move.

Bryn Bache | CNBC

We could witness a scenario where Russia claims that the war is over, but the international community and Turkey not recognize that.

Sinan Ulgen

former Turkish diplomat

In effect, Turkey’s enforcement of Montreux blocks Russia from reinforcing its Black Sea fleet from outside, or from moving warships now in the Black Sea back into the Mediterranean.

“These provisions don’t change much of the balance of power in the Black Sea,” Sinan Ulgen told CNBC. The former Turkish diplomat is now a visiting scholar at Carnegie Europe.

However,” Ulgen said, “once these Russian ships that belong to the Black Sea fleet are in the Black Sea, they will not be able to return to the Mediterranean. Over the long term, that might pose a problem for Russia’s power projection abilities in the eastern Mediterranean and particularly Syria.”

The sinking of the Russian warship Moskva in the Black Sea on April 14 highlighted Russia’s quandary: Moscow has to convince Turkey to open the Bosporus and Dardanelles if it wants to replace the Moskva — which was Russia’s Black Sea flagship — or move the Black Sea fleet away from Ukraine.

Rising Turkey-Russia tension?

Moscow and Ankara haven’t yet experienced sharp disagreements with each other over Ukraine. But there are concerns their relationship could become more tense.

Turkey is attempting to broker peace between Russia and Ukraine and hasn’t imposed sanctions on Russia.

But Turkey is a member of NATO. And in what may be a sign of escalation between Turkey and Russia, Turkey on Saturday closed its airspace to Russian planes trying to fly into Syria.

In 2015, Turkey shot down a Russian jet on its border with Syria, where Moscow was fighting on behalf of Syrian strongman Bashar al-Assad. Moscow responded with a ban on Turkish food imports and workers.

Ulgen said the Montreux Convention could pit Turkey and Russia against each other again.

“It is unclear for how long the tenure of Article 19 will prevail,” he said, adding that it “was triggered by the recognition on the Turkish side that there is a war.”

“We could witness a scenario,” he said, “where Russia claims that the war is over, but the international community and Turkey not recognize that.”

Ulgen said he believes Turkey will continue to comply with the letter of the Montreux Convention, because applying flexibility for one side in the war could create tremendous pressure from the other side.

“Turkey would not want to find itself in that position,” he said.



Source

Gold, silver prices fall after CME raises precious metals margins — again
World

Gold, silver prices fall after CME raises precious metals margins — again

One kilogram and a five hundred gram gold bars next to one kilogram silver bars at The Vaults Group gold dealers arranged in Barcelona, Spain, on Monday, April 28, 2025. Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images Gold and silver prices lost ground on Wednesday as investors booked profits after a historic annual rally and exchange […]

Read More
Retail investors close out one of their best years ever. How they beat Wall Street at their own game
World

Retail investors close out one of their best years ever. How they beat Wall Street at their own game

A graph displaying the Apple stock price on a smartphone app. Jaap Arriens | Nurphoto | Getty Images Retail investors have had a gangbuster year in 2025. Mom-and-pop investors bought the dip at key points this year, providing strong returns as the market climbed to all-time highs. Once thought of as unsophisticated and easily duped, […]

Read More
Champagne sales surge at New Year — but labor abuses and tariffs have clouded the industry
World

Champagne sales surge at New Year — but labor abuses and tariffs have clouded the industry

Bulgarian grape harvesters work in the vineyards of Chateau de Meursault in Meursault, in the Burgundy region of central-eastern France, on August 26, 2025. (Photo by ARNAUD FINISTRE / AFP) (Photo by ARNAUD FINISTRE/AFP via Getty Images) Arnaud Finistre | Afp | Getty Images It’ll come as no surprise that sales of Champagne peak in […]

Read More