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  1. The Black Sea raid was an Ottoman naval sortie against Russian ports in the Black Sea on 29 October 1914, supported by Germany, that led to the Ottoman entry into World War I. The attack was conceived by Ottoman War Minister Enver Pasha, German Admiral Wilhelm Souchon, and the German foreign ministry . The German government had been hoping that ...

    • 29 October 1914
    • Ottoman victory
    • Black Sea44°N 35°E /  44°N 35°E  / 44; 35
  2. Oct 29, 2022 · Reuters. The Russian Navy at the entrance to the port city of Sevastopol in 2014. Ukraine has carried out a "massive" drone attack on the Black Sea Fleet in the Crimean port city of Sevastopol ...

  3. 11 hours ago · Russia has pulled its last Black Sea Fleet warship out from Crimea, according to a Ukrainian official. Dmitry Pletenchuk, a spokesperson for the Naval Forces of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, made ...

  4. Aug 14, 2023 · The Ottoman naval bombardment of Russian ports in the Black Sea on 29-30 October 1914, known as the Black Sea Raid, led to Russia declaring war on the Ottoman Empire. The Russian Caucasus Army crossed the frontier on 2 November in the Bergmann Offensive, capturing Köprüköy on 7 November. [1] By 20 October, the army consisted of 100 ...

  5. Sep 11, 2023 · Ukraine says it has successfully retaken control of four gas drilling platforms in the northern Black Sea, close to the Crimean Peninsula. Video of the operation, which Ukraine says took place ...

  6. Snake Island campaign. /  45.25500°N 30.20417°E  / 45.25500; 30.20417. The Snake Island campaign was a period of Russian occupation and military conflict for Snake Island, a small, strategically located Ukrainian island in the Black Sea. On 24 February 2022, the first day of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the Russian Navy attacked ...

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  8. Footnote 87 The resulting outcome of this stratagem might be qualified as a policy of sham neutrality, which the Ottomans pursued up until the Black Sea Raid on 29 October. Cemal revealed that the Cabinet declared neutrality ‘solely with the object of gaining time’ and, as far as the Ottoman Empire’s participation in the war was concerned, the authorities ‘were simply waiting for the ...

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