"SODON" COVERS ANYTHING RELATED TO MONGOLIA

Saturday, April 2, 2022

Mongolia is divided on Ukraine

Today's topic is Ukraine. Russia is attacking it's neighbor- Ukraine. The whole world is condemning the aggressor. Dictator-countries like North Korea, Syria, Eritrea and Belarus stand with the Russian. 141 countries voted against Russia at the UN. 

Russia says, they defend those Russians in Ukraine whom the Kyiv  regime treated as second class citizens and even killed many of them. There might be some truth in that claim, but the way Russia is handling it, is wrong. Totally wrong.

It's like Mongolia is attacking China with an excuse that minority ethnic Mongolians living in China suffer the same faith and treated the same way by the Han Chinese, like Russians living in Ukraine.  One of the minority groups in China- Mongolians have been treated so badly in their home territories. They have been jailed for speaking out, forcefully moved from their places, discriminated against and lastly, striped of rights to be taught some classes in their own language in schools. 

If Mongolia interferes and enters China to defend and protect Mongols living in China, China would not like it, and all hell will break loose. Mongolia is not capable of doing it anyway, someone might laugh. It is not about being capable of or not, it's about principles. Mongolia has no right to be involved in this issue.

Or another example:  Let's assume that Mongolia's Government  treats  the Kazakh minority so bad that they revolt. They even want to be independent and ask for help from neighboring Kazakhstan. And what should Kazakhstan do? Aid the revolting Kazakhs, or even enter Mongolia to conduct some "special operations"?  Hell, no! 

In both examples above, the victims are the minorities (Mongols, Kazakhs) who are happening to live in countries where the majority nationalities are different (culture, lifestyle, language etc) than those minorities. The same applies to those Russians living in Ukraine, to whom came Russian army to "protect and defend"

In all these cases, this is a "domestic" issue, and any foreign country has no business to be involved in this matter. That is the principle, and it should be respected and followed by any power, no matter how big or small that power is. 

This suppression and discrimination problem should be addressed by any means other than a war or military conflict. The UN and other international bodies are invented for that, but one should admit that unfortunately they don't have the power as we wish, to fix such problems and keep the world in peace. 

Even so, big powers should refrain from using their "muscles" but instead must use their "brains". Russia's action is a  very bad model for "small fishes" and other powers. 

Now, let's talk about how this war affects Mongolia as a country and how Mongolians perceive it.  In general, this war affects us badly. As a country, we are "sanctioned" too. Why? We are a landlocked country, with only two neighbors: in south with China and in north with Russia. If Russia is sanctioned, any land and air connections with the West are cut off because everything goes   over Russian territories. Plus, Russians impose restrictions on products and foods exports to Mongolia. So, we have "sanctions" from both the West and the Russian Federation. What is left is China.

If Mongolians show support for Ukraine and condemn the war, Russia may become upset and stop supplying with energy and petroleum products. That would be the main concern, especially for those who support Russian action, although our official position on Ukraine-Russia issue has been neutral, with being one of the 35 countries abstained from UN vote on Ukraine. So, Mongolian citizens are divided.

Those who support Russia say that we should stand with Russia because Russia is our guarantee for independence, and because Russia insisted that Mongolia should be independent after WW2, persuaded the other powers to accept it. Especially, when China wanted to "keep" Mongolia (even though pre-PRC and non-Chinese empire was collapsed) claiming that Mongolia "belonged" to China. (Mongolia was never a part of China except they occupied for a short time in 1920's). 

There is a truth in there that Russia (or Soviet Union, to be precise) was the only power to speak for our independence, and we should be thankful for that, no matter what their intentions were.

Maybe they wanted a "buffer-state" between them and China and did not want to border with China directly in the south, who knows. Since then, Soviet Union and Mongolian People's Republic were close partners, and many Mongolians still have very deep sympathy towards Russians. 

The other part of Mongolians condemn Russia's action, and claiming that today's Russia is not the same we know back then, like Soviet Union. Russia has changed, we say. They are not friendly to us anymore , as they used to, even though there has been regime changes in both countries since 1990. Russia has become more "bully", so to speak. And that is proved by their action against Ukrainians who actually are their "relatives" by root with almost same culture and language! 

Anyways, that was a short view of how it looks like in Mongolia during this complicated times when the whole world seems to be affected as well by this Ukraine-Russia war. Hopefully, it ends soon and everything goes back to normal. Hope that Russia's President  Putin thinks twice before every decision  he makes. It is sad that Russia has ruined its reputation and made so many "enemies". Being isolated and feeling hostility from the world are not promising and healthy signs which will hurt Russia in the long run.    I don't think that Russian citizens would want  to have a "Robinson Crusoe type" of lifestyle in the future.