Some Western media outlets reported that the USSR had declared war on Turkey. The main news agency of the Soviet Union, the TASS, described the information as rumors and provocation. The TASS’ denial was published in the Pravda newspaper on 9 January, 1946.

The French press, in particular, reported about the “bloody clashes” that allegedly took place between border guards on the Turkish-Bulgarian demarcation line and on the Russian-Turkish border in the Caucasus region.

The TASS stated that the rumors were nothing but "a false and unscrupulous hoax" of the Parisian newspaper Paris-Matin, indicating the tendency of its editorial staff to "provocative pranks".

The exacerbation of the situation between late 1945 and early 1946 was attributed, in particular, to the Soviet Union’s territorial claims against Turkey.

The USSR insisted on the return of its historical regions of Georgia and Armenia and questioned Turkey’s sovereignty over the Dardanelles. These demands were expressed by the People's Commissar for Foreign Affairs Vyacheslav Molotov at the Potsdam Conference in the summer of 1945.

In February 1952, Turkey joined NATO, and on 30 May, 1953, the USSR completely abandoned territorial claims in relation to Ankara, a move that came after the death of Soviet leader Joseph Stalin.

 

Sources:

The newspaper "Pravda" No. 7 (10089) dated 9 January, 1946