PropertyValue
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Black Sea Accords (1983: Doomsday)
rdfs:comment
  • The Black Sea Accords, establishing the Black Sea Association, were agreed to over a number of months during what amounted to secret meetings at the Rhodopian Consulate in Vize, Thrace. Also known as the Treaty of Vize, these accords were agreed to by the negotiating powers, signed, and notarized on the 31st of August, 2011, and took effect the next day, September 1st, 2011.
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:alt-history/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:althistory/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
Formation
  • 2011-09-01
Status
  • Active
leader name
  • John Panaretos
Name
  • Black Sea Association
Type
  • Trading and Security Alliance
Language
  • Arabic, Bulgarian, Hungarian, Greek, Ukrainian, Romanian, Russian
Membership
  • Crimea, the Don and Kuban Republics, Greece, Rhodope, Partium, Transylvania
Headquarters
  • New Byzantium, Thrace, Greek Federation
Abbreviation
  • BSA
Purpose
  • Local Cooperation, and Economic and Trade Security
Leader title
  • Director
region served
  • Black Sea Region
Location
  • Southeastern Europe
abstract
  • The Black Sea Accords, establishing the Black Sea Association, were agreed to over a number of months during what amounted to secret meetings at the Rhodopian Consulate in Vize, Thrace. Also known as the Treaty of Vize, these accords were agreed to by the negotiating powers, signed, and notarized on the 31st of August, 2011, and took effect the next day, September 1st, 2011. Primarily, negotiations were held between the Crimean, Greek, Rhodopian, and Transylvanian governments, though representatives from the Don and Kuban Republics and Partium were also present at times. These were held at Vize, given that the area is more secure than most, as well as the proceedings were easier to keep hidden. ADC officials, in light of the Greek membership in that organization, were brought in at the last moment, to cement an understanding over the relation of the Accords to that organization, into place. The Atlantic Defense Community itself - not its membership, but the organization itself - would also send an observer to meetings of the Accord signatories.