Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

UNITED STATES WARSHIPS ENTER THE BLACK SEA.—The destroyers Dyess (top) and Turner passing through the Strait of Bosphorus for a five-day cruise in the Black Sea. The ships belong to the United States Sixth Fleet, which is based in the Mediterranean. Their entry into the Black Sea was described in Russian protests as provocative and illegal. The ships have since left the Black Sea.

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19681214.2.110

Bibliographic details

Press, Volume CVIII, Issue 31862, 14 December 1968, Page 13

Word Count
64

UNITED STATES WARSHIPS ENTER THE BLACK SEA.—The destroyers Dyess (top) and Turner passing through the Strait of Bosphorus for a five-day cruise in the Black Sea. The ships belong to the United States Sixth Fleet, which is based in the Mediterranean. Their entry into the Black Sea was described in Russian protests as provocative and illegal. The ships have since left the Black Sea. Press, Volume CVIII, Issue 31862, 14 December 1968, Page 13

UNITED STATES WARSHIPS ENTER THE BLACK SEA.—The destroyers Dyess (top) and Turner passing through the Strait of Bosphorus for a five-day cruise in the Black Sea. The ships belong to the United States Sixth Fleet, which is based in the Mediterranean. Their entry into the Black Sea was described in Russian protests as provocative and illegal. The ships have since left the Black Sea. Press, Volume CVIII, Issue 31862, 14 December 1968, Page 13