000 01316nam a22001457a 4500
999 _c514728
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008 201130b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aBridges, Brian.
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245 _a‘An ambiguous area’: Mongolia in Soviet-Japanese relations in the mid-1930s
260 _aModern Asian Studies
300 _a54(3), May, 2020: p.730-758
520 _aThe Mongolian People's Republic (MPR) became the focus of intense competition between the Soviet Union and Japan in the 1930s, when it was more commonly known as Outer Mongolia. The Soviet Union viewed the MPR as an ideological and strategic ally, and was determined to defend that state against the increasingly adventurist actions of the Japanese military based in northern China. Japanese ambitions to solve the so-called ‘Manmo’ (Manchuria-Mongolia) problem led the Soviets to initiate ever-closer links with the MPR, culminating in the 1936 pact of mutual assistance which was intended to constrain Japanese pressure. Using unpublished Japanese materials as well as Russian and Mongolian sources, this article demonstrates how the Soviet leadership increasingly viewed the MPR as strategically crucial to the defence of the Soviet Far East. - Reproduced
773 _aModern Asian Studies
906 _aINTERNATIONAL RELATIONS - MONGOLIA
942 _cAR