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The passage of US warships from the Turkish Straits to the Black Sea has been frequently discussed in the media and the public. Recent news regarding the additional military deployments made in Greece through the Alexandroupoli port has increased interest in this issue. According to announcement made by the US Defense Visual Information Distribution Service (DVIDS), more than 300 pieces of equipment, including 10 helicopters, were offloaded there on May 5, 2021. The Black Sea region has been brought to the top of the international agenda with the emergence of an extremely tense environment in the region. The fact that the Black Sea region was brought to the top of the international agenda with the emergence of an extremely tense environment in the region due to Russia’s annexation of Crimea and oft-repeated naval exercises by naval forces in the region remind us of the developments regarding the bombardment of some of the Turkish ports in the Black Sea by the Greek navy during the establishment period of the Republic of Turkey following the end of the First World War. In this context, Greek warships made extensive bombardments on Ereğli on the Black Sea coast on 6 June, İnebolu on 30 June, and Trabzon on 20 July in the summer of 1921.. As to Samsun, the bombardment took place in the summer of 1922.The point that draws attention in this historical event is that, at the time when the Greek navy bombarded Samsun, the destroyers belonging to the US navy were also present in the port of Samsun. According to the information provided in various publications regarding this bombardment, including academic ones, these US navy warships were Clamsen class destroyers of USS Sands (DD-243), USS, McFarland (DD-237), and USS Sturtevant (DD-240).
History, Other Social and Behavioral Sciences, European History, Political History, US Navy, Political Science, International and Area Studies, Public Affairs, Public Policy and Public Administration, Social and Behavioral Sciences, World War One, Urban Studies and Planning, Sociology, Black Sea, Samsun, Arts and Humanities, Ottoman Empire, Military History, Near and Middle Eastern Studies
History, Other Social and Behavioral Sciences, European History, Political History, US Navy, Political Science, International and Area Studies, Public Affairs, Public Policy and Public Administration, Social and Behavioral Sciences, World War One, Urban Studies and Planning, Sociology, Black Sea, Samsun, Arts and Humanities, Ottoman Empire, Military History, Near and Middle Eastern Studies
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