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Turkey, Bulgaria, Romania ink deal to remove floating mines from Black Sea

The mission will be solely open to Black Sea NATO countries, the Turkish Defense Ministry stressed following signing the ceremony.
ODESSA, UKRAINE - APRIL 25: A view of the sign which reads "Caution: mines" on the beach on April 25, 2022 in Odessa, Ukraine. Ukrainian forces, as well as civilian Odessans, remain on guard against a potential Russian advance on this historic port city, whose capture could help give Russia control of Ukraine's southern coast. But given Russia's setbacks in this two-month-long war, including the sinking of its Black Sea Fleet's flagship Moskva, analysts regard a full-scale attack on Odessa to be unlikely. (

ANKARA — NATO allies Turkey, Bulgaria and Romania on Thursday signed a memorandum of understanding for a joint initiative to clear drifting mines in the Black Sea region, which have proliferated since the outbreak of the war in Ukraine.

The Mine Countermeasures Naval Group in the Black Sea (MCM Black Sea) was signed by Turkish Defense Minister Yasar Guler, his Romanian counterpart, Angel Tilvar, and Bulgarian Deputy Defense Minister Atanas Zapryanov in Ankara. 

Under the deal, the three countries will launch mine hunting activities mainly in participating countries’ territorial waters and exclusive economic zones.

“Initially, anti-mine ships from only the three Black Sea allies are envisaged to participate in the MCM Black Sea,” the Bulgarian Defense Ministry said in a statement after the signing ceremony. 

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