Skip to main content

Turkey, Romania, Bulgaria announce mechanism to clear mines in Black Sea

The joint mechanism between Turkey, Bulgaria and Romania comes after the British government said Russia might use sea mines to deter Kyiv from exporting its grain.

A view of the sign that reads "Caution: mines" on the beach on April 25, 2022, in Odesa, Ukraine.
A view of the sign that reads "Caution: mines" on the beach on April 25, 2022, in Odesa, Ukraine. — Anastasia Vlasova/Getty Images

ANKARA — Turkey, Romania and Bulgaria agreed to set up a trilateral mechanism to clear floating mines in the Black Sea amid warnings that Russia may use sea mines to target Ukraine shipments, the Turkish Defense Ministry announced Thursday. 

“Operational procedures and the scope of the mechanism will be decided in meetings due to be held in the upcoming days,” a high-level Turkish Defense Ministry official told journalists, without elaborating further. 

The ministry said the three-way mechanism was agreed on during Turkish Defense Minister Yasar Guler’s meeting with his Bulgarian counterpart Todor Tagarev and Romanian State Secretary for Defense Simona Cojocaru on Wednesday, on the sidelines of the NATO defense ministers summit in Brussels.

Guler also held separate meetings with his Ukrainian counterpart Rustem Umerov, British counterpart Grant Shapps and US counterpart Lloyd J. Austin on the sidelines of the summit.

Related Topics

Subscribe for unlimited access

All news, events, memos, reports, and analysis, and access all 10 of our newsletters. Learn more

$14 monthly or $100 annually ($8.33/month)
OR

Continue reading this article for free

All news, events, memos, reports, and analysis, and access all 10 of our newsletters. Learn more.

By signing up, you agree to Al-Monitor’s Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy. Already have an account? Log in