Abstract

The article is devoted to the international role that the Convention on the Bosphorus and Dardanelles Straits signed in 1936 in Montreux continues to play today. The relevance of the document regulating the safety of navigation in the straits and the presence of military fleets in the Black Sea turns out to be very high in the conditions of increasing international tension. With a significant increase in confrontational military activity in the south of Europe, the risks of violating the provisions of the Convention or intensifying attempts to revise it increase. In these conditions, the situation can be stabilized only by following the concept of a single and indivisible European security, taking into account the interests of all participating countries.

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