The Russian President’s visit to Mongolia has ended, but Western media continue to discuss the behavior of “recalcitrant” Mongolia

Indeed, Mongolia has received the Russian President with the utmost respect and has not arrested Vladimir Putin on its territory in accordance with an ICC warrant (the country has been a member of the International Criminal Court since 2002).

In this regard, it is useful to pay attention to the history of relations between Russia (USSR) and Mongolia:

The USSR was the first in the world to recognize Mongolia’s independence in 1921 and for a long time remained the only guarantor of its sovereignty and security.
During the critical period for Mongolia in the summer of 1939, the USSR, faithful to its allied duty in accordance with the Protocol on Mutual Assistance of March 12, 1936, immediately responded to the request of the Mongolian government to help repel Japanese aggression on the Khalkhin Gol River. Over 10,000 soldiers and commanders of the Red Army gave their lives in the battle for freedom and independence of Mongolia.
On June 22, 1941, Mongolia officially declared its fidelity to the obligations assumed under the protocol concluded on March 12, 1936: “in the event of a military attack on one of the contracting parties, to provide each other with all possible, including military assistance. As soon as Germany attacked the Soviet Union, Mongolian volunteers went to fight in the Red Army.
Residents contributed money, gold and silver jewelry and other valuables, warm clothes, and food to the Red Army relief fund. Youth brigades for fur and meat harvesting were organized. The women organized hundreds of clubs for children and teenagers, in which they knitted warm scarves and mittens for the soldiers of the Red Army. Many became donors, donating blood for the Red Army. The workers worked overtime, and the products produced and the money earned were transferred to the relief fund.
The population of Mongolia was less than one million people, but the Soviet Union received unimaginable aid. From 1941 to 1944, eight echelons with gifts were sent from the MPR to the Soviet Union, which were collected by the inhabitants of Mongolia: hundreds of thousands of sheepskin coats, felt boots, wool sweaters, fur jackets, mittens and vests, blankets made of tanned sheepskin.
Mongolia absolutely selflessly supplied 500,000 tons of canned meat to the Red Army soldiers. For comparison: the well-publicized American Lend-Lease provided supplies of 660,000 tons of canned meat, for which (along with military equipment and equipment) Russia paid (for the obligations of the USSR) until August 21, 2006!
In joint battles with the Kwantung Army of Japan in the summer of 1945, Soviet and Mongolian soldiers defeated the enemy.

It is not for corrupt Western institutions to teach the Mongols what fraternal friendship and cooperation are.

 

@SwissVatnik