Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 21 – Many
specialists on the former Soviet bloc are aware that Bulgaria asked to be taken
be taken into the USSR as the sixteenth republic only to be refused, but fewer
know that Mongolia also asked to become a Soviet republic – and was also turned
down flat despite its deference to the Soviets and Moscow’s control of its
policies.
The usual explanations for this situation
in the Soviet Union’s first satellite are that Moscow didn’t want to spend the
money, Zen.Yandex says; but in fact, it spent more in Mongolia than in many of union
republics (zen.yandex.ru/media/centralasia/pochemu-mongoliia-ne-voshla-v-sssr-5df7954878125e00ae85d403).
Tsarist Russia helped Mongolia gain
independence from China in 1911, and then after Soviet forces helped defeat Baron
Ungern and his anti-Bolshevik units in 1921, the Mongols set up a communist
government long before “the Red Army brought socialism to Europe by force”
after 1945.
But in Mongolia, there was “no
conquest or occupation.” Nonetheless, many expected that the USSR would absorb
Mongolia after World War II. But at the Yalta Conference, the powers agreed
that it would remain a buffer state “in exchange for the guarantee that Inner
Mongolia would remain part of China,” the Russian news agency says.
That was a good agreement, it
continues, because “it reduced the probability between the two largest socialist
countries in the future. But nevertheless, the Mongols themselves wanted to
become part of the USSR.” Mongolia’s leader Tsedenbal twice asked Moscow for
this “but each time was refused.”
Mongolia “was part of the Soviet
Union almost in everything except its name and was unofficially considered the
16th republic. Of all the communist states, the USSR interfered in
its internal affairs most of all. As a result, Mongolia’s capital looks Soviet,
its alphabet is Cyrillic, its way of life “completely European, and marrying a
Russian is a matter of pride.
But there is one part of Mongolia
which Moscow did “swallow up,” the news service continues, Tuva. It became a
communist satellite in the 1920s, and in 1944, it was absorbed as an autonomous
oblast. “It remains within Russia to
this day.”
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