MongoliaIntroduction
Figure 1. Administrative Divisions of
Mongolia, 1989
MONGOLIA AND THE MONGOL PEOPLE have periodically been at the
center of international events. The histories of nations--indeed,
of continents--have been rewritten and major cultural and
political changes have occurred because of a virtual handful of
seemingly remote pastoral nomads. The thirteenth-century
accomplishments of Chinggis Khan in conquering a swath of the
world from modern-day Korea to southern Russia and in invading
deep into Europe, and the cultural achievements of his grandson,
Khubilai Khan, in China are well-known in world history. Seven
hundred years later, a much compressed Mongolian nation first
attracted world attention as a strategic battleground between
Japan and the Soviet Union and later between the Soviet Union and
China. In the 1980s, the Mongolian People's Republic continued to
be a critical geopolitical factor in Sino-Soviet relations.
The Mongols arose from obscure origins in the recesses of
Inner Asia to unify their immediate nomadic neighbors and then to
conquer much of the Eurasian landmass, ruling large parts of it
for more than a century. Emerging from a newly consolidated
heartland north of the Gobi in the thirteenth century, the
Mongols and their armies--made up of conquered peoples--thrust
through western Asia, crossed the Urals, invaded the countries of
Eastern Europe, and pressed on to Austria and the Adriatic. They
also advanced through southwest Asia to the eastern Mediterranean
and conquered the Chinese empire. Around the same time, they
embarked on ambitious maritime expeditions against Java and
Japan. The Mongols were phenomenally hard driving and ambitious
for such a small group, and their accomplishments were
considerable. Only the Mamluks of Egypt, the "divine winds" of
Japan, and the Mongols' own legal tradition--the need to elect a
new khan--halted the inexorable Mongol advances.
Resistance to and accommodation of the Mongols had mixed
effects on the national developments of some of the "host"
nations. European kingdoms and principalities formed alliances to
do battle, albeit unsuccessfully, against the Mongol armies.
Europeans even combined with the hated Muslims in Egypt and
Palestine to oppose the common Mongol enemy. Although the Mongol
invasion of Japan was not successful, it contributed to the
eventual downfall of Japan's ruling faction. The conquering
Mongols brought an infusion of new ideas and unity to China but
were eventually absorbed and lost their ability to rule over a
people hundreds of times more numerous than themselves.
But Mongol influence did not end with the termination of
military conquests or absorption. Their presence was
institutionalized in many of the lands they conquered through
adoption of Mongol military tactics, administrative forms, and
commercial enterprises. The historical developments of such
disparate nations as Russia, China, and Iran were directly
affected by the Mongols. Wherever they settled outside their
homeland, the Mongols brought about cultural change and
institutional improvements. Although there never was a "Pax
Mongolica," the spread of the Mongol polity across Eurasia
resulted in a large measure of cultural exchange. Chinese scribes
and artists served the court of the Ilkhans in Iran, Italian
merchants served the great khans in Karakorum and Daidu (as
Beijing was then known), papal envoys recorded events in the
courts of the great khans, Mongol princes were dispatched to all
points of the great Mongol empire to observe and be observed, and
the Golden Horde and their Tatar descendants left a lasting mark
on Moscovy through administrative developments and intermarriage.
Although eventually subsumed as part of the Chinese empire, the
Mongols were quick to seek independence when that empire
disintegrated in 1911.
The Mongol character has been greatly influenced by the
extremes of Mongolia's geography, comprising huge rolling
plateaus, rugged mountain ranges, and areas susceptible to
earthquakes. On the one hand Mongolia has Hovsgol Nuur--Asia's
second largest freshwater lake--and river systems that drain
toward the Arctic and Pacific oceans and into Central Asia, and
on the other, the Gobi, a vast arid rangeland within which are
even less hospitable desert areas. The climate is mostly cold and
dry with long frigid winters and short hot summers. Minimal
precipitation, temperatures that freeze the nation's rivers and
freshwater lakes for long periods of the year, and severe
blizzards and dust storms leave only around 1 percent of the land
arable and make human and livestock existence fragile at best.
Such an inhospitable land not unexpectedly is home to a
relatively small, widely dispersed population. Of the 4 million
plus Mongols--only a fourfold increase over the population of the
era of Chinggis Khan--just slightly more than 2 million people
live in the modern Mongolian People's Republic (the rest are
minority peoples in China and the Soviet Union). Except for a
concentration of 500,000 people in Ulaanbaatar, the capital, the
rest of the population is sparsely distributed: another quarter
of the population resides in small urban areas and the remaining
approximately 49 percent live in the vast countryside. The
population, however, is young and growing rapidly as government
incentives encourage large families to offset labor shortages.
Ninety percent of the population is composed of ethnic Mongols,
making the nation extremely homogeneous; Turkic peoples, such as
Tuvins and Kazakhs, Chinese, Russians, and other minorities make
up the remainder.
Nomadic peoples of uncertain origins are recorded as living
in what is now the Mongolian People's Republic in the third
century B.C., and archaeological evidence takes human habitation
in the Gobi back a hundred centuries or more earlier. Warfare was
a way of life, against other nomadic peoples in competition for
land, and in the south against the Chinese, whose high culture
and fertile lands were always attractive to the Mongols. China
responded with punitive expeditions, which pushed these pre- and
proto-Mongol peoples farther north, west, and east and resulted
in periods of Chinese hegemony over parts of Inner Asia. The
Mongols of Chinggis Khan emerged in central Mongolia in the
twelfth century under Chinggis's grandfather. Tribal alliances,
wars, clan confederations, and more wars contributed to a new
Mongol unity and organization and the eventual conquest of lands
throughout Eurasia.
The high point of Mongol achievements was followed by gradual
fragmentation. The Mongol successes throughout the first half of
the thirteenth century were eroded by overextension of lines of
control from the capital, first at Karakorum and later at Daidu.
By the late fourteenth century, only local vestiges of Mongol
glory persisted in parts of Asia. The main core of the Mongolian
population in China retreated to the old homeland, where their
governing system devolved into a quasi-feudalistic system fraught
with disunity and conflict. Caught between the emergence of
tsarist Russia and the Manchus--distant cousins of the Mongols--
in the seventeenth century, Mongolia eventually was absorbed into
the periphery of the Chinese polity, where it remained until
1911. As the Chinese imperial system disintegrated, the Mongols
sought national independence but the Chinese did not willingly
give up, and Mongolia continued to be divided into northern
(Outer Mongolia, see Glossary) and
southern (Inner Mongolia, see Glossary)
sections. Russian interest in Mongolia was replaced by
Soviet involvement, and the Japanese sought political leverage
and applied periodic pressure up through World War II.
Throughout the twentieth century, Russian and Soviet
influence over Mongolia has been a predominant factor in its
national development. The tsarist government aided Mongolian
revolutionaries both diplomatically and militarily against the
Chinese, and anti-Bolshevik White Russian military forces did
active battle against both the Chinese and the indigenous
revolutionaries. The theocratic monarchy established after 1911
was greatly limited by the Mongolian Revolution of 1921 and
eventually replaced by a "people's republic" under heavy Soviet
influence. This influence continued throughout the twentieth
century in the form of political guidance and economic aid.
Severe purges of monarchists, Buddhists, conservative
revolutionaries, and any other real or perceived opponent of the
new communist regime took place throughout the 1920s and early
1930s. Extremism bordered on national disaster before evolving
into more moderate policies of a new Mongolian socialism
characterized by closely planned economic growth. Joint
Mongolian-Soviet armies successfully fended off Japanese military
advances in 1939. The rest of World War II produced further
agricultural and industrial development in support of Moscow's
war efforts and made Mongolia a critical buffer in the Soviet Far
Eastern defense system. Technically neutral, Mongolia declared
war against Japan only in August 1945.
Peacetime brought additional Soviet and East European
economic aid (and eventually membership in the Council for Mutual
Economic Assistance
[Comecon, see Glossary]) and a new
relationship with the People's Republic of China after its
establishment in 1949. Mongolian-Chinese relations resulted in
still more economic assistance to and trade with Ulaanbaatar.
Mongolia's external policies, however, were founded on those of
the Soviet Union, and relations with China, always influenced by
suspicions over real or imaginary claims by China to "lost
territories," faltered in the wake of the Sino-Soviet rift that
developed in the late 1950s. By the late 1960s, Mongolia had
become an armed camp, as Soviet and Chinese troops were poised
against one another along the Sino-Mongolian border. Tensions
between Ulaanbaatar and Beijing lessened only when Sino-Soviet
rapprochement began to evolve in the mid-1980s. The issue of
Soviet troop withdrawal from Mongolia still constrained Sino-
Mongolian relations in the late 1980s.
Some of the same late twentieth-century geopolitical
developments that lessened tensions with China also brought
Mongolia farther into the mainstream of world affairs. Mongolia
participated more actively in international organizations and
improved relations with a growing number of Western countries,
including the United States, which established diplomatic
relations with Mongolia in 1987.
Traditional Mongolian society was affected heavily by foreign
influences: commerce was controlled by Chinese merchants and the
state religion--Tibetan Buddhism or
Lamaism (see Glossary)--was
simultaneously bureaucratic and otherworldly. Modern society has
been shaped by the continued foreign--primarily Soviet--
influence. But despite increasing urbanization and
industrialization, nearly half of the population lives either by
the traditional methods of pastoral nomadism--moving their herds
(sheep, horses, cattle, goats, and yaks) from one area of
temporary sustenance to another--or in a close symbiotic
relationship with the nomads. Despite its hardships, the nomadic
life provides Mongols with national values and a sense of
historical identity and pride.
However, traditional values and practices have made
modernization of society a difficult task. Once they had
eliminated the "feudal" aspects of society, Mongolia's communist
leaders still had to take radical steps to modernize their
country. Scientific methods were applied to animal husbandry and
agriculture and new industries, such as copper and coal mining,
were developed. Herding and agricultural collectives, mines and
factories, and educational institutions became the focal point of
a social organization controlled by state administrators, most of
whom were members of the ruling Mongolian People's Revolutionary
Party. Modernization inevitably brought greater differentiation
and mobility in Mongolian society as party functionaries, white
collar administrators, factory workers, and increasing numbers of
urban residents (who typically have larger family units than
those in the countryside) surpassed in numbers and opportunities
the once self-sufficient pastoralists, who remain at the bottom
of the social system.
The development of the economy has been closely associated
with social modernization in Mongolia. Beginning with the 1921
revolution, the government took increasing control over the
economy. Mongolia has a planned economy based on state and
cooperative ownership. Annual planning began in 1941, and five-
year plans began in 1948. The plans have been closely integrated
with the five-year plans of the Soviet Union since 1961 and with
Comecon multilateral plans since 1976. In the years since 1921,
Mongolia has been transformed from an almost strictly agrarian
economy to a diversified agricultural-industrial economy.
Economic reforms in the Soviet Union inspired similar efforts in
Mongolia under Jambyn Batmonh, premier between 1974 and 1984 and
general secretary of the Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party
since 1984. The acceleration of economic development, greater
application of science and technology to production, improved
management and planning, greater independence for economic
enterprises, and more balance among individual, collective, and
societal interests were the target areas of reform in the late
1980s.
Underpinning society and the economy are the government and
party. Mongolia has a highly centralized government run by a
cabinet (the Council of Ministers), with a unicameral legislature
(People's Great
Hural, see Glossary), and an independent judicial
branch overseeing the courts and criminal justice system.
Provinces and provincial-level cities and counties and town
centers comprise local administration. As in all communist-run
states, at the pinnacle of control is one-party rule. The
Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party, with a membership of
nearly 90,000, operates with quinquennial party congresses and an
elected Central Committee. The party's Political Bureau and
Secretariat provide standing leadership and carry out day-to-day
business. Local party administration coincides with government
offices and production units at each level.
Mongolia's national security is intimately linked with that
of the Soviet Union. The armed forces have a rich historical
tradition in the legacy of the great khans--an era of Mongolian
history still resented by the Soviets--and their more immediate
revolutionary forbearers of the 1910s and 1920s. The Mongolian
People's Army was established in 1921, when the new provisional
national government was proclaimed. As in all aspects of modern
Mongolian organization, Soviet influence has predominated. Soviet
Red Army troops remained in Mongolia at least until 1925 and were
brought back in the 1930s to help quell anticommunist rebellions.
They have had a major military presence since then, first poised
against the Japanese and later against the Chinese threat. Up
through the 1940s, Mongolian troops had had fighting experiences
against White Russians, Chinese warlord armies, Mongolian rebels,
the Japanese, and Chinese Guomindang (Nationalist) forces.
In the 1950s, serious efforts at military modernization took
place, but it was the Sino-Soviet rift that brought about the
most dramatic changes. Increasingly close ties developed between
the Mongolian and Soviet armed forces in accordance with a
succession of mutual defense pacts. Open hostilities between
Soviet and Chinese forces in the late 1960s further strengthened
ties and led to still greater modernization of the ground and air
forces. By 1988 the armed forces numbered 24,500 active-duty
personnel--most organized into four motorized rifle divisions and
a MiG-21 fighter regiment--and some 200,000 reservists and
paramilitary personnel.
Military training for able-bodied civilians--both men and
women--and universal military conscription are key elements in a
country with a tradition in which all men were considered
warriors. Additionally, all citizens are obliged to participate
in civil defense preparedness activities. Close ties between the
military establishment and the civilian economy have existed
since the 1930s, with many industries producing both military
matériel and civilian-use goods. A demobilized soldier normally
has greater technical skills than those who did not serve in the
military and thus contributes significantly to the economy upon
completion of military service. The military also plays an
important economic role through numerous military construction
projects for the civilian sector.
In sum, the Mongolian People's Republic, as it reaches the
1990s, is a small, economically developing country that has made
great strides since it emerged from centuries of Chinese
domination. The measure of progress is controlled by a one-party,
highly centralized system that has long been influenced by Soviet
mentors. With a foreign policy coordinated with that of the
Soviet Union and closely integrated with and heavily dependent on
Soviet and East European assistance, the degree to which Mongolia
is able to conduct its own affairs is questionable. As it has for
several millennia, Mongolia will continue to be geopolitically
important.
June 30, 1989
* * *
As this book was being completed, notable developments
occurred in Mongolia. Like the countries of Eastern Europe and
the Soviet Union, Mongolia began to reform its social, political,
and economic sectors and to be more open to the West. The changes
set in motion by the replacement of Yumjaagiyn Tsedenbal with the
reformist leadership of Batmonh in 1984 were coming to fruition
in 1990.
Throughout 1989, Tsedenbal was criticized for having had a
"dogmatic interpretation of socialism" and having rushed to the
conclusion that the period of socialism had begun. The 1989
leadership, blamed Tsedenbal not only for the problems of the
past but for having contributed to their own inability to
determine the level of economic construction because of his
earlier flawed analyses. In an effort to push blame back still
farther, Tsedenbal's reputation was linked with that of his
predecessor, Horloyn Choybalsan, whom Batmonh had criticized at
the Fifth Plenary Session of the Nineteenth Mongolian People's
Revolutionary Party Congress in December 1988.
Amidst the criticism of recent Mongolian leaders, the
previous negative analysis of the historical role of Chinggis
Khan was revised. Chinggis was seen in an increasingly favorable
light as the Mongol nation's founder and a national hero, a
position not well received in Moscow. Calls for publication of
historical texts and literature in Mongolian classical script
rather than Cyrillic grew, and usage of Mongolian rather than
Russian-language words increased. Fears were expressed in
official circles mid-way in 1989 that some of the new nationalist
pride might be taking a dangerous anti-Soviet line, and
appropriate warnings were made to those whose thinking may have
been swayed by "bourgeois propaganda."
Western material culture also took hold in reform-minded
Mongolia. Semi-professional rock music groups emerged after a
decade of low-key development and avant-grade art began to enjoy
official sanction. The emphasis on cultural reform, however,
appeared to concentrate on a renewed interest in traditional
prerevolutionary achievements.
High-level exchanges with the Soviet Union continued to be
the norm in relations between Ulaanbaatar and Moscow, including
Batmonh's brief "working visit" with Gorbachev to reaffirm the
two communist parties' "close comradeship" in July 1989. As a
sign of more openness among communist countries, in July 1989
Mongolia and Albania restored formal diplomatic relations and the
Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party normalized relations with
the Chinese Communist Party. Indicative of the improved relations
with China was the visit a month later to Mongolia by Chinese
foreign minister Qian Qichen. The capitalist world was not
ignored, as the minister of foreign economic ties and supply was
dispatched to Britain and the United States in July 1989 in
search of investment and joint venture possibilities, and
diplomatic relations were established with the European Economic
Community in August 1989.
Domestic organizational activity also took place in the last
half of 1989. That a new draft Constitution of the Mongolian
People's Republic would be forthcoming in 1990 was announced in
August 1989 as part of the process of changing "outdated laws and
rules necessitated by the process of renewal . . . ." Top
leadership changes, such as when Minister of Defense Jamsrangiyn
Yondon retired in September 1989 and was replaced by Lieutenant
General Lubsangombyn Molomjamts, also took place.
In late 1989, the government revealed the existence in Dornod
Aymag of the Mardai uranium mine and the nearby town of Erdes,
which were built and run as concessions by the Soviet Union.
Established by a 1981 intergovernmental agreement, the mine began
shipments of uranium ore to the Soviet Union in 1988. It was also
disclosed that unemployment officially was 27,000, but unofficial
estimates ran as high as three time that figure. Furthermore,
Mongolia was more forthright about the economic drawbacks
stemming from the country's political and ideological
orientation.
In late 1989 the new openness about economic conditions
brought forth a deputy minister of foreign economic relations and
supply's admission that many official statistics had been
falsified during the Tsedenbal years to bolster claims of
economic progress. Mongolia watcher Alan Sanders, when reporting
on the revelation, said "The deluge of phoney statistics has had
some effect--not least on Mongolian economists, who have been
using them for planning purposes." The statistics had found their
way into United Nations publications and been used for years by
foreign analysts projecting the state of the Mongolian economy.
Users of the economic data in this book thus are warned to keep
in mind the "official" nature of many of the figures used. After
the admission, both the leadership and the media criticized the
provision of inaccurate economic statistics to United Nations
agencies as well as Mongolia's refusal to seek economic
assistance from Western countries.
Dissatisfaction with Mongolia's previously self-imposed
isolation and Soviet plans to reduce its economic presence in
Mongolia led to great Mongolian efforts in late 1989 and early
1990 to expand foreign economic relations beyond the communist
countries. Having joined the Group of 77--the coalition of more
than 120 developing countries in the United Nations--in June
1989, Mongolia sought to join the Asian Development Bank,
establish official relations with the European Economic
Community, and become a member of the International Civil
Aviation Organization. Mongolian officials actively promoted
joint ventures with capitalist companies and welcomed visits by
Western and Asian business representatives. Plans were underway
to teach foreign languages for trade purposes and to foster
expanded tourism. In December 1989, Batmonh announced that
relations between Mongolia and China had been normalized and that
conditions were favorable for cooperation. In a first-ever visit
of a Mongolian People's Republic leader to a non-communist
country, Prime Minister Dumaagiyn Sodnom made a six-day trip to
Japan in March 1990. A most-favored-nation trading agreement was
signed and Japan agreed to donate U$3 million worth of medical
equipment and supplies and encouraged Japanese firms to assist in
the construction of a steel mill in Mongolia.
The decade ended with a the Seventh Plenary Session of the
party congress and a two-day session of the Great People's Hural.
The party plenum retired three Political Bureau members and
appointed two new, younger men to candidate membership. The
plenary session closed with a resolution calling for more
energetic implementation of the party's economic and social
policy and a promise to hold the Twentieth Congress of the
Mongolia People's Revolutionary Party in late November 1990. For
the first time, Great People's Hural sessions were broadcast
nationally over both radio and television as the deputies
approved a draft socio-economic development plan and a draft
state budget for 1990. Universal, equal, and direct suffrage
through secret ballot for national and local assembly elections
was provided in a draft law also approved by the Great People's
Hural.
In December 1989 and early 1990, the Mongolian Democratic
Union, a group of intellectuals and students labeled as an
"unauthorized organization" by the government-controlled media,
started holding rallies in Ulaanbaatar, first to voice support
for the party and hural documents on socio-economic
reconstruction but later to demand democracy, government reform,
and a multi-party system. They also advocated bringing Tsedenbal,
who had been living in Moscow since 1984, to trial for having
allowed Mongolia to stagnate during his thirty-two-year regime.
An early response from the Political Bureau was the announcement
that it had rehabilitated people illegally repressed in the 1930s
and 1940s. Amidst contradictory reports of whether or not the
party and government had both granted official recognition to the
union but banned public assemblies and demonstrations, the media
criticized the union for making "ridiculous and contradictory
statements" about the administration's reform efforts. Union
members, believing they were acting in defiance of the public
assembly ban, continued to hold mass rallies and issue calls for
action by the government. Despite the ambiguous status of the
Mongolian Democratic Union, the government and party were
propelling the nation toward further reform and openness in the
1990s.
March 5, 1990
Robert L. Worden
Data as of June 1989
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