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Geopolítica e Política

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Geopolítica e Política

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The “Odessa Corridor”

19.12.25 | Duarte Pacheco Pereira

Alexandroupolis-Odessa transport corridor

Europe’s New Vertical Corridor:

Alexandroupolis-Odessa

 


The modernisation of the Alexandroupolis-Odessa transport corridor is a Greek initiative and supported by the European Commission. It is part of the Greece-Bulgaria-Romania trilateral framework, which also includes Moldova and Ukraine. Connecting the Aegean Sea to the Black Sea through modern motorways and high-speed rail infrastructure also has an important military role.
 
Greece, Romania and Bulgaria are working on an agreement on the steps to build the corridor. The EU Commissioner for Sustainable Transport and Tourism, Apostolos Apostolos Tzitzikostas of Greece, who is a strong supporter of the corridor, called on all three countries to speed up construction and complete the project quickly.
 
On 10 October 2025, a trilateral meeting between Bulgaria, the EC and the Danish Presidency was held in the Council of the EU regarding Bulgaria’s proposals for the inclusion of the Sofia-Skopje-Durrës and Alexandroupolis-Svilengrad-Rousse-Bucharest sections in the annex to the legislative proposal for the establishment of the Connecting Europe Facility 3 (CEF 3) for the period 2028-2034. Bulgaria, Greece and Romania are aiming to sign a memorandum on the establishment of the joint initiative and the accompanying action plan within the Transport Council on 4 December this year.
 
There is still no concrete clarity on the route of the “Vertical Corridor”. The Greek side is interested in the route from Alexandroupolis via Varna to Negru Voda in Romania. Initially, Greece proposed Alexandroupolis as the starting point, as it is a strategic hub for road, rail and maritime transport, as well as for the energy sector, and is also an important hub for liquefied natural gas.
 
But the corridor is not only infrastructure, but also a strategic necessity in terms of NATO military mobility and connectivity with Ukraine and Moldova, and their inclusion seems a logical and urgent act.
 
From a military point of view, it is more expedient to build the route as far as possible from the Black Sea, so as not to be vulnerable to possible Russian strikes. Therefore, the port of Thessaloniki and further through Sofia to the interior of Romania are also considered as a more likely starting point for the route. In view of the ongoing conflict in Ukraine, these transport supply lines are of particular strategic importance for NATO, which is why they are a priority for the Alliance. Europe is already adapting to new security challenges, and the corridor will allow troops, heavy vehicles and equipment to cross borders faster and more safely.
 
The “Vertical Corridor” is planned to be financed by both European funds and national funds of Greece, Bulgaria and Romania. The three EU countries are interested in absorbing as much EU resources as possible, taking advantage of the current uncertainty in connection with the war in Ukraine, which is why they are trying to accelerate the implementation of the project.
 
The Greek side has a traditional interest in Corridor No. 10 (Greece-Macedonia-Serbia-Hungary-Western Europe). However, since North Macedonia and Serbia are not members of the Schengen area, the flow of goods is very slow, especially during the summer months. Bulgaria and Romania, which are already part of Schengen, point to this advantage for focusing efforts on modernizing the Alexandroupolis-Burgas-Varna-Constanta corridor.
 
For Bulgaria, it is particularly advantageous to connect Corridor No. 8 (Albania-Kosovo-North Macedonia-Bulgaria) with the Alexandroupolis-Odessa (or Thessaloniki-Odessa) corridor.
 
In addition to the need to develop NATO military mobility, a driving factor for the corridor is also the US interest in transporting liquefied natural gas along the “Vertical Corridor” starting point in Alexandroupolis. The negotiations are based on the need to address the price disparities that hinder the prospects of the “Vertical Corridor”. The negotiations are not easy, as currently uncoordinated and increased tariffs in Greece, Bulgaria, Romania, Moldova and Ukraine make the “Vertical Corridor” an unattractive and expensive option for gas suppliers, limiting its competitiveness against Russian natural gas. The “Vertical Corridor” is, however, the only south-north gas pipeline that can deliver US liquefied natural gas to households and businesses in Southeastern Europe. The corridor could provide 5 to 8 million cubic meters of US LNG to the region.
 
The sixth meeting of the Partnership for Transatlantic Energy Cooperation (P-TEC), held in Athens on November 6, set a goal of putting the gas corridor into operation in 2026. The forum was organized by the US Department of Energy, the Greek Ministry of Environment and Energy, and the Atlantic Council’s Center for Global Energy.
 
Thanks to strategic investments in the Alexandroupolis terminal and the new gas infrastructure, the entire region will be freed from dependence on Russian natural gas.
 
The Athens forum last week also hosted a meeting on the energy triangle in the 3+1 format – Greece, Cyprus and Israel with the US.
 
During the forum, Greece also signed a contract with the US for the supply of LNG for the next 20 years. This will strengthen Greece’s role as an “energy hub” and “entry point” for US LNG.
 
The inclusion of the India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor (IMEC) framework in the “3+1” declaration signals an additional level of strategic intent. IMEC, officially announced at the G20 summit in Delhi in 2023, represents a counter-initiative of the West and the Global South against China’s “One Belt, One Road” initiative. The “3+1” repositions the Eastern Mediterranean as a critical link through which IMEC’s energy connectivity reaches European markets. In this framework, Greece appears not as a periphery but as a key node on the 3,730-km electricity highway that integrates renewable energy from India, the UAE and Saudi Arabia directly into the EU’s electricity grids, with an estimated economic impact of approximately $31 billion.
 
Photo: Gastrade

 

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Russia Strikes Turkish Ships in Black Sea Amid Ukraine Retaliation

Russia Strikes Turkish Ships in Black Sea Amid Ukraine Retaliation

Russian forces struck four Turkish-owned or -operated civilian ships in the Black Sea on December 12–13, 2025, in apparent retaliation for recent Ukrainian drone attacks on Russian-linked oil tankers. Maritime security experts say the strikes mark a dangerous escalation in attacks on commercial shipping.


By Bill Giannopoulos at Greek City Times on December 14, 2025 


On December 12, Russian drones and missiles hit ports in Ukraine’s Odesa region, including Chornomorsk and Odesa, damaging three Turkish-owned vessels. The Panama-flagged Cenk T, operated by Turkish company Cenk RoRo, caught fire after a Russian Shahed kamikaze drone struck its bow while docked in Chornomorsk. The ship carried humanitarian aid, including generators and food supplies. Ukrainian authorities reported no crew deaths, though one port worker was injured. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy condemned the attack, calling it “pointless” and disruptive to civilian life.

On December 13, the Turkish vessel Viva sustained minor damage from a Russian drone strike while en route from Ukraine to Egypt via the grain corridor, carrying sunflower oil. All 11 crew members were unharmed, and the ship continued its journey.

Turkey’s Foreign Ministry condemned the attacks, calling for an immediate halt to strikes on ports and maritime routes and warning that escalation could threaten regional stability. The attacks came shortly after a phone call between Presidents Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and Vladimir Putin on Black Sea security.

Russian strikes follow a series of Ukrainian attacks on Russia’s “shadow fleet,” vessels used to evade oil sanctions:

• Late November: Sea Baby drones hit Kairos and Virat off Turkey’s coast.
• December 2: Drone strike disabled Midvolga-2 north of Sinop, Turkey.
• December 10: Sea drones disabled Dashan in the Black Sea.

President Vladimir Putin had warned of retaliation, including the possibility of cutting Ukraine off from the sea. Russian media framed the strikes as a justified response to Ukrainian actions.

 

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From Alexandroupolis to Rostov-on-Don by car

From Alexandroupolis to Rostov-on-Don by car.

Russia’s Escalation in the Black Sea

Has Turkey on Edge


Moscow is signaling a shift toward long-term maritime coercion, endangering Ankara’s energy strategy.

By Antonia Colibasanu in Geopolitical Futures on December 16, 2025


Pressure is building on Ukraine and Russia to end their nearly four-year war, setting off a scramble for leverage that is unnerving some of their neighbors. One of the hottest areas of contention is the Black Sea, where escalating attacks by both sides have drawn condemnation, warnings and urgent calls for diplomacy from the Turkish government. What Ankara fears most in this situation is an escalation spiral that leaves the Black Sea an irreversibly militarized, Russian-dominated space.

In a statement issued on Dec. 15, Turkey’s Defense Ministry said an unidentified unmanned aerial vehicle approaching Turkish airspace over the Black Sea was detected and that NATO-assigned and domestically operated F-16 fighter jets were scrambled on an alert mission that ended with the drone being downed. This is the latest indicator that Turkey is getting anxious about what’s happening in the Black Sea.

On Dec. 14, Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan proposed a limited agreement on the Russia-Ukraine war, with both parties agreeing to refrain from attacks on energy facilities and ensuring navigation security in the Black Sea until they can agree on a comprehensive peace deal. This came after Turkey’s Foreign Ministry warned on Dec. 12 that the damage to a Turkish-owned ship in a Russian missile attack on Ukraine’s Chornomorsk port highlighted the potential for escalation in the Black Sea, emphasizing the need to safeguard freedom of navigation and protect energy and port infrastructure in the region.

These incidents are not the first time Turkey has signaled concern over escalation in the Black Sea. Last month, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan criticized Ukraine’s drone attacks on two Russian vessels – the Kairos and Virat – as they passed through the sea. Both reportedly were part of Russia’s so-called shadow fleet. On Dec. 2, the Turkish maritime authority also reported that a tanker carrying sunflower oil from Russia to Georgia was attacked in the Black Sea.

On Dec. 13, Russia deployed a Kinzhal hypersonic missile to strike Ukraine’s Odesa port. The port is no stranger to Russian attacks, but this was reportedly the first time Moscow used a hypersonic missile against it. Designed to penetrate advanced air defenses, Kinzhals are typically reserved for high-value targets, underscoring the seriousness of the attack. Officially, Moscow described the strike as retaliation for Kyiv’s own strikes against civilian infrastructure inside Russia, as well as its sea drone attacks on Russian-bound tankers. More important, Russia is blurring the line between military objectives and commercial shipping, raising the risk profile for all traffic in the Black Sea basin. Moscow’s message seems to be that the Black Sea is no longer a peripheral theater but is becoming – as it was at the beginning of the war – a contested space where economic activity is subject to military coercion.

By employing a system intended to defeat Patriot- and SAMP/T-type defenses, Moscow is demonstrating both capability and intent: capability in that it can hold coastal and maritime infrastructure at risk regardless of Western-supplied air defenses, and intent in that it is willing to expend scarce, high-end munitions to reinforce a coercive narrative of “retaliation” and maritime denial. In practical terms, this narrows the margin for risk management for commercial shipping and infrastructure developers alike: If hypersonic systems are used against ports, then fixed maritime assets by nature become harder to insure, defend or politically derisk.

Given the importance to Turkey of Black Sea shipping and energy, the Turkish government is alarmed by this turn of events. For weeks, Ankara has been warning both sides against escalation. As the conflict intensifies at sea, navigation in the Black Sea will become increasingly muddled and dangerous. Earlier in the war, Russia imposed a blockade and waged an air campaign designed to wreck Ukrainian grain exports. With time, however, a new grain corridor developed close to the Romanian and Bulgarian coasts, benefiting from NATO’s presence, the work of a Turkish-Bulgarian-Romanian demining task force and better coordination with international maritime authorities. Ukrainian exports and regional trade remain hampered by the war, but this corridor in the western Black Sea has become a critical lifeline.

The eastern and northeastern Black Sea, closer to Russian-controlled waters and Crimea, is effectively under Russian military dominance. While commercial traffic continues to operate in this area, it does so under implicit Russian control and at elevated risk. That risk, however, is generally assessed as lower than in the northwestern Black Sea, as threats in the eastern sector have so far been largely limited to drone activity.

By contrast, the northwestern Black Sea – including the approaches to Odesa and the Danube delta – is exposed to intermittent missile strikes and drone attacks. Navigation in this area remains possible but is highly conditional, dependent on real-time security assessments, naval escorts and rapidly fluctuating risk premiums. Russia’s use of the Kinzhal hypersonic missile in Odesa underscores not only a sharp increase in perceived risk but also Moscow’s apparent willingness to treat this area as a medium-to-long-term operational theater rather than a zone of temporary disruption.

Given the region’s importance not only for Ukrainian shipping but also for long-term energy and infrastructure projects that could challenge Russian influence, such a move would make strategic sense. One of these initiatives is the Neptun Deep offshore gas project, located in Romanian waters and jointly led by OMV Petrom (majority-controlled by Austria’s OMV) and Romania’s state-owned Romgaz. Expected to start delivering gas around 2027, Neptun Deep would produce roughly 8 billion cubic meters per year from its estimated 100 bcm reserves.

For Turkey, however, the greater concern is the Sakarya gas field, which was discovered in 2020 and already feeds the Turkish national grid. Central to Ankara’s energy strategy, Sakarya is estimated to hold hundreds of billions of cubic meters of gas. A new reserve containing some 75 bcm of gas was discovered just this year. Ankara plans to launch its own offshore exploration and infrastructure development soon.

If these projects are realized, they would weaken Russia’s historical monopoly on gas supplies in the region, diminishing its ability to use energy to influence the countries of Southeastern Europe and the Black Sea basin. A fully developed Neptun Deep would loosen Moscow’s grip on Southeastern European gas markets, while expanded Turkish offshore development underpins Ankara’s ambition to reduce import dependence and strengthen its role as a regional energy producer. Therefore, Moscow likely views both projects as strategic competitors.

Legally, neither project is in Russian-controlled waters. Control of the airspace above them, however, is not so clearly defined. As it stands, both projects fall within the Flight Information Region (FIR) administered from Crimea, which since 2014 has been under de facto Russian control. In a militarized environment, FIR control becomes more than a technical aviation matter. Simply through manipulation or selective enforcement of FIR-related procedures, Moscow could disrupt construction and development of these offshore energy projects – interfering with helicopter transport, aerial surveys and emergency response, for example. Without firing a shot, Russia could impose operational delays, raise insurance and compliance costs and introduce legal ambiguity. The involvement of major U.S. companies as subcontractors in Neptun Deep may discourage Russia from some forms of chicanery, but it likely would not take much escalation nearby to drive up the project’s costs. (Similar mismatches between exclusive economic zones and FIRs exist in other strategically sensitive regions, notably the Arctic and the South China Sea.)

photo_2025-12-19 08.57.47.jpeg

photo_2025-12-19 09.03.49.jpeg

In this context, Turkey’s call for renewed security understandings – explicitly linking freedom of navigation with the protection of energy infrastructure – is not mere diplomatic rhetoric. It reflects a strategic calculation that unchecked escalation, combined with Russia’s capacity to project military power across the Black Sea, could not only disrupt commercial activity but also undermine critical regional energy projects. Beyond immediate navigation risks, it is the prospect of the Black Sea evolving into a permanently militarized, Russian-dominated space that is driving Turkey’s increasingly explicit warnings and broader calls for cooperative security frameworks addressing both maritime and energy sector vulnerabilities.

At the same time, as diplomatic signaling increasingly points toward the possibility of a ceasefire, Russia faces growing pressure to lock in strategic advantages before the window closes. Having failed to secure Odesa – a goal that is unattainable in the near term – Moscow appears focused on achieving a level of escalation at sea that would allow it to assert effective control over the Black Sea environment. This includes demonstrating the ability to influence or enforce FIR-related restrictions, or at least to signal that it possesses such leverage, thereby constraining the development of competing energy projects and protecting its long-term strategic position.

 

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Russia Opens the Odessa Corridor

NATO’s Worst Fear Begins

Mearsheimer WorldView

 

Russia´s decision to open the Odessa Corridor marks a potentially historic turning point in the Ukraine conflict. This move threatens NATO’s strategic interests in the Black Sea and raises urgent questions about escalation, deterrence, and Western credibility.

In this video, we analyze what the Odessa Corridor really means, why NATO fears this development, and how it could permanently alter Ukraine’s access to global trade and security guarantees. Through the lens of John Mearsheimer’s realist theory, we examine whether this is a calculated strategic advance or the beginning of a wider regional confrontation.

 

PH Pension Update GuideYouTube16/12/2025

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