In the latest Policy Brief for the Hoover History Lab, Research and Teaching Fellow Ziyi Wang writes about what the future of the Black Sea should look like once the Russian invasion of Ukraine ends. She says the Black Sea must be strategically reprioritized after the war. Although the Montreux Convention has effectively limited escalation in that maritime theater, a potential ceasefire will expose the region’s enduring risks of volatility. Russian ambitions in the Black Sea will not fade after the war. Given the delicate diplomacy between Ankara and Moscow and the Black Sea’s central role in global trade and food security, safeguarding the region will require Western prioritization.
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In the latest Policy Brief for the Hoover History Lab, Research and Teaching Fellow Ziyi Wang writes about what the future of the Black Sea should look like once the Russian invasion of Ukraine ends. She says the Black Sea must be strategically reprioritized after the war. Although the Montreux Convention has effectively limited escalation in that maritime theater, a potential ceasefire will expose the region’s enduring risks of volatility. Russian ambitions in the Black Sea will not fade after the war. Given the delicate diplomacy between Ankara and Moscow and the Black Sea’s central role in global trade and food security, safeguarding the region will require Western prioritization.