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Khorloogiin Choibalsan

Khorloogiin Choibalsan[a] (8 February 1895 – 26 January 1952) was a Mongolian politician who served as the leader of the Mongolian People's Republic as chairman of the Council of Ministers (premier) from 1939 until his death in 1952. He was also commander-in-chief of the Mongolian People's Army from 1937, and chairman of the Presidium of the State Little Khural (head of state) from 1929 to 1930. A close ally of Joseph Stalin, Choibalsan led a dictatorship and organized Stalinist purges in Mongolia between 1937 and 1939 as head of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, executing tens of thousands of Mongolian citizens.

Khorloogiin Choibalsan
ᠬᠣᠷᠯᠤ᠎ᠠ ᠶᠢᠨᠴᠣᠢᠢᠪᠠᠯᠰᠠᠩ
Хорлоогийн Чойбалсан
Choibalsan in the 1940s
10th Chairman of the Council of Ministers
In office
24 March 1939 – 26 January 1952
General SecretaryBanzarjavyn Baasanjav
Dashiin Damba
Yumjaagiin Tsedenbal
Preceded byAnandyn Amar
Succeeded byYumjaagiin Tsedenbal
4th Chairman of the Presidium of the State Little Hural
In office
24 January 1929 – 27 April 1930
General SecretaryÖlziin Badrakh
Bat-Ochiryn Eldev-Ochir
Peljidiin Genden
Preceded byJamtsangiin Damdinsüren
Succeeded byLosolyn Laagan
Personal details
Born
Khorloogiin Dugar

(1895-02-08)8 February 1895
Achit Beysiyn, Outer Mongolia, Qing China
Died26 January 1952(1952-01-26) (aged 56)
Moscow, RSFSR, Soviet Union
Resting placeAltan-Ölgii National Cemetery
NationalityMongolian
Political partyMongolian People's Revolutionary Party
Spouse(s)Borotologai (1921–1935)
B. Gündegmaa (1935–1952)
Military service
Allegiance Mongolian People's Republic
Branch/service Mongolian People's Army
Years of service1921–1952
RankMarshal
CommandsAll (supreme commander)
Battles/warsMongolian Revolution of 1921
World War II
Awards



Foreign:




Choibalsan was one of the 1921 Mongolian revolutionaries, and held several political and military roles in the 1920s. His rise to power in the 1930s was personally orchestrated by Stalin, and his rule was maintained by a repressive state and cult of personality. Mongolia's economic, political, and military ties to the Soviet Union deepened, though after World War II, Choibalsan supported pan-Mongolian unification with Inner Mongolia. He died of cancer in Moscow in 1952, and was succeeded as leader by his protégé, Yumjaagiin Tsedenbal.

Early life edit

Choibalsan was born on 8 February 1895 in Achit Beysiyn, near present-day Choibalsan, Dornod Province.[1] He was the youngest of four children born to a poor unmarried herdswoman named Khorloo (the name Khorloogiin is a matronymic). His father was likely a Barga tribes man, Daur Mongol from Inner Mongolia called Jamsu, but Choibalsan claimed to be unaware of his identity.[2] Named Dugar at birth, he assumed the religious name Choibalsan at age 13 after entering the local Buddhist monastery of San Beysiyn Khüree[3] where he trained to be a Lamaist monk. Five years later he fled to Khüree (also known as Urga—present-day Ulaanbaatar) with another novice where he worked odd jobs. In part to prevent him from being returned to the monastery, a sympathetic Buryat teacher named Nikolai Danchinov had him enrolled in the Russian consulate's Russian-Mongolian Translators' School.[4] A year later he was sent on at public expense to study at a gymnasium in Irkutsk, Russia from 1914 to 1917.

Mongolian Revolution of 1921 edit

Formation of the Mongolian People's Party edit

 
The Russian Consulate in Khüree played a central role in Choibalsan's early development.
 
Sükhbaatar (left) with Choibalsan in the early 1920s

Choibalsan and fellow Mongolian students in Russia were called back to Khüree by the Bogd Khaan government following the 1917 October Revolution. Exposed to Bolshevism while living among Irkutsk's radicalized student population,[5] Choibalsan joined the revolutionary Consular Hill or Konsulyn Denj (Консулын дэнж) group, heavily influenced by Bolshevist philosophy and established to resist the Chinese occupation of Outer Mongolia after 1919. Original members of the group also included Dambyn Chagdarjav and Darizavyn Losol.[6] Dogsomyn Bodoo, the group's leader, was a former teacher and mentor of Choibalsan's at the Russian-Mongolian School for Translators.[7] With his serviceable Russian, Choibalsan served as the group's translator with contacts at the Russian Consulate. Those contacts later encouraged Konsulyn Denj to join forces with the more nationalist-oriented resistance group Züün Khüree (East Khüree), which counted Soliin Danzan, Dansrabilegiin Dogsom, and Damdin Sükhbaatar among its members. On 25 June 1920,[8] the new body adopted the name Mongolian People's Party (MPP). In 1924 the party renamed itself the Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party or MPRP after the death of the Bogd Khaan and the formal proclamation of the Mongolian People's Republic (MPR).

Contact with Soviets and the first MPP Congress edit

In late June 1920, Choibalsan and Danzan embarked for Irkutsk (they were later joined by Losol, Chagdarjav, Dogsom, L. Dendev, and Sükhbaatar—the famous "First Seven") to establish contacts with the Soviets and seek assistance in their struggle for independence. Choibalsan and Sükhbaatar remained together in Irkutsk for several months raising awareness of Mongolia's plight and receiving military training. During this period Sükhbaatar gradually became a second mentor to Choibalsan.[9]

While the group of seven continued their lobbying efforts in Soviet Russia, forces commanded by the anti-Bolshevik Russian warlord Roman von Ungern-Sternberg invaded Mongolia from the east and ejected occupying Chinese garrisons from Khüree in February 1921. No longer faced with directly confronting the Chinese in Mongolia, the Soviets finally threw their backing behind the Mongolian revolutionaries. Choibalsan and Sükhbaatar relocated to Troitskosavsk (modern-day Kyakhta on the Russian-Mongolian border) to coordinate revolutionary activities and recruit Mongolian fighters. Choibalsan secretly ventured as far as Khüree to consult with MPP supporters, enlist fighters, and spirit members of Sükhbaatar's family back to Troitskosavsk.[10]

At a Soviet-organized MPP conference held secretly in Troitskosavsk from 1 to 3 March 1921 (subsequently regarded as the first congress of the Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party), Choibalsan was elected a member of the provisional revolutionary government. He was also appointed Political Commissar (Deputy Chief and chief propagandist) of the Mongol Ardyn Huv'sgalt Tsereg (Mongolian: Монгол Ардын Хувьсгалт Цэрэг), or the Mongolian People's Army, commanded by Sükhbaatar.[11]

Defeat of Ungern-Sternberg edit

Within days, Sükhbaatar's Mongolian partisan army (now numbering 400 men) defeated the larger but demoralized Chinese garrison that had fled to Kyakhta Maimaicheng (modern-day Altanbulag). Joint Mongol and Red Army forces directly confronted Ungern's troops in a series of battles near Troitskosavsk from late May to mid-June. Choibalsan took command of a Mongolian detachment based in Tariat, in modern-day Arkhangai province[12] and, together with the Russian forces commanded by Petr Efimovich Shchetinkin, fought right guard actions in western Mongolia in support of the main Russian-Mongolia advance through modern-day Selenge and Töv provinces. After small skirmishes with Ungern's remaining guard units, the joint Russian-Mongol force entered Khüree unchallenged on 6 July 1921. Choibalsan pursued remnants of Ungern's army and was likely on hand at Ungern's capture by Shchetinkin on 22 August 1921.[13]

Rise to power edit

After the revolution, Choibalsan remained Deputy Chief of the Mongolian People's Army while also being elected Chairman of the Mongolian Revolutionary Youth League (MRYL).[11] Despite his credentials as one of the MPP's founding members, he failed to advance beyond second-tier government posts throughout the 1920s.[14] His heavy drinking, womanizing, and violent temperament alienated him from party leaders and at one point in the early 1930s he was temporarily demoted from being Minister of Foreign Affairs to the role of simple Museum Director. While he often gravitated towards the leftist faction of the party, he was suspected of being a rightist in what little mention is made of him in Soviet and Mongolian reports of the era.[14] Choibalsan himself did not include many of his own speeches from this period in his collected works, indicating his role during this period was not a prominent one. It was not until members of the Soviet security apparatus such as Soviet Commissar for Defense Kliment Voroshilov took note of Choibalsan's political usefulness in the late 1920s and early 1930s that his career prospects began to improve.[15]

Purge of Bodoo edit

In late 1921, Choibalsan's MRYL foot soldiers carried out Prime Minister Bodoo's modernization campaign of forcibly cutting off "feudal" ornaments from Mongolian clothing (large cuffs, women's jewelry, long hair etc.).[16] The angry public backlash led to Bodoo's purge and eventual execution in August 1922 while Choibalsan was stripped of both full party membership and his position of as deputy commander of the Mongolian military. Only Sükhbaatar's intervention saved him from Bodoo's fate.[17] Choibalsan was sent to a Moscow Russian Military Academy after Sükhbaatar's death in 1923[18] and when he returned to Ulaanbaatar a year later was offered his old mentor's former position as Commander in Chief of the People's Revolutionary Troops. He also held positions as a member of the Presidium of the State Great Hural from 1924 to 1928 and as a member of the MPRP Central Committee.

Right Opportunism (1925–28) edit

At the Third Party Congress in 1924, Choibalsan sided with the leftist leader Rinchingiin Elbegdorj as left and right-wing factions of the MPRP called for the arrest and execution of moderate party leader Danzan, who was accused of protecting bourgeois interests and engaging in business with Chinese firms.[19] Following Danzan's death, Choibalsan and Rinchino's political influence diminished[20] as the party's right-wing, led by Tseren-Ochiryn Dambadorj, assumed control and, during a period later referred to as the "Right Opportunism" (1925-1928), promoted rightist policies mirroring Lenin's New Economic Policy in the Soviet Union.

Leftist Period 1928–1932 edit

 
Choibalsan circa 1925

The rise of Josef Stalin and termination of Lenin's New Economic Policy influenced political developments in the MPR with the 1928 MPRP Seventh Party Congress ushering in the "Leftist Period." Soviet advisors arranged for Choibalsan to be "kicked upstairs" to be Chairman of the Little Hural (i.e. titular head of state)[17] from where, in 1929 and 1930, he supported implementation of Soviet-backed leftist policies of more rapid collectivization, land expropriation, and persecution of the Buddhist faith.

At the Eighth Party Congress in 1930 Choibalsan contributed to a ramping up leftist socialist reforms when again encouraged by Soviet agents, he introduced personally formulated decrees that intensified land confiscation and forced collectivization measures.[21] His appointment in 1931 as Minister of Livestock and Agriculture (a position he held until 1935) gave him even greater authority to enforce the policies. Traditional herders were forced off the steppe and into badly managed collective farms, destroying one third of Mongolian livestock.[22] Over 800 properties belonging to the nobility and the Buddhist faith were confiscated and over 700 head of mostly noble households were executed.[23] Under Stalinist influence in the Mongolian People's Republic, an estimated 17,000 monks were killed, official figures show.[24]

The government's aggressive measures ultimately lead to brutal armed uprisings in Khövsgöl, Arkhangai, Övörkhangai, and Zavkhan provinces in 1932. In reaction, Moscow ordered a temporary curtailment of economic centralization efforts. Comintern agents counted on Choibalsan to be a strong advocate for its New Turn policy to correct the "excesses" of "the Left Deviation" when it was introduced in an extraordinary plenum of the MPRP Central Committee in June 1932. Later MPR histories would credit Choibalsan with being the first to criticize the leftist period and propose reforms, but these were mere fabrications meant to build up Choibalsan's cult of personality.[25]

Lkhümbe Affair edit

 
Jambyn Lkhümbe

In the summer of 1934, Choibalsan's name surfaced during interrogations of party members arrested as part of the "Lkhümbe Affair," a manufactured conspiracy in which MPRP General Secretary Jambyn Lkhümbe and other MPRP elements, particularly Buryat-Mongols, were falsely accused of conspiring with Japanese spies. The invasion of neighboring Manchuria by Japanese forces in 1931 had raised fears in Ulaanbaatar and Moscow alike of possible Japanese military expansion into Mongolia and the Soviet Far East. Over 1,500 people were implicated in the purge and 56 were executed. Choibalsan was called to Moscow where he was arrested and interrogated regarding his possible involvement. Within days, however, he was cooperating with the NKVD in the interrogation and torture of fellow Mongolians.[15] Satisfied with his loyalty, Stalin ordered Mongolia's Prime Minister Peljidiin Genden to appoint Choibalsan as deputy prime minister. Genden vigorously objected, but to no avail. As relations between Genden and Stalin soured, Choibalsan's influence with Moscow increased. In 1935, as a public sign of his favor, Stalin gifted Choibalsan 20 GAZ automobiles which he distributed among Mongolian power players to increase his prestige.[26]

Great Terror edit

Purge of Genden edit

In 1936 Choibalsan and Gelegdorjiin Demid were appointed Marshals of the Armed Forces while Choibalsan also became head of the newly elevated Ministry of Internal Affairs, 26 percent of whose staff were NKVD agents.[27] Acting under Moscow's directive, Choibalsan then had Genden purged in March 1936 for sabotaging Mongol-Soviet relations by rejecting Stalin's demand that he eliminate the country's Buddhist clergy.[28] Genden was removed from his offices of the prime minister and foreign minister, arrested, and sent to Moscow, where he was executed a year later. Anandyn Amar became Prime Minister in his place.

Over the next three years, Soviet mentors in the Ministry of Internal Affairs guided Choibalsan in planning and carrying out the "Great Terror". Possibly advised by a Soviet Official, Chopyak,[27] Choibalsan had Internal Affairs Committee rules amended in May 1936 to facilitate the detention of high ranking politicians without first consulting political superiors. Soon thereafter 23 high ranking lamas were arrested for participating in a "counter revolutionary centre." Following a yearlong trial, they were publicly executed in early October 1937. When Mongolia's Procurator General protested the lamas' prosecution, he too was arrested and then shot.[29]

Death of Marshal Demid edit

 
Deputy NKVD Chief Mikhail Frinovsky

In August 1937, the 36-year-old Marshal Demid, whose popularity Choibalsan had always resented,[29] died under suspicious circumstances resulting in Choibalsan's promotion to the dual role of sole Commander-in-Chief of the Mongolian military and Minister of Defense. The following day Choibalsan, as Interior Minister, issued Order 366 which declared that many in Mongolia "had fallen under the influence of Japanese spies and provocateurs." That same month Stalin, alarmed by Japanese military movements in Manchuria[30] ordered the stationing of 30,000 Red Army troops in Mongolia and had dispatched a large Soviet delegation to Ulaanbaatar under Soviet Deputy NKVD Commissar Mikhail Frinovsky. Frinovsky was charged with setting in motion the violent purges that he had so effectively carried out in the Soviet Union under NKVD Chief Nikolai Yezhov. Working through Soviet advisers already embedded within the Ministry of Interior and with a willing Choibalsan providing symbolic cover, Frinovsky built the purge framework from behind the scenes; producing arrest lists and creating an NKVD style Troika (headed by Choibalsan) to try suspects.

 
The ruins of Manzushir Khiid, one of several hundred Buddhist monasteries destroyed during the purge.

10 September 1937 edit

The arrest of 65 high ranking government officials and intelligentsia on the night of 10 September 1937, signaled the launch of the purges in earnest. All were accused of spying for Japan as part of a Genden-Demid plot and most confessed under intense torture.[31] The first show trial was staged at the Central Theatre from 18 to 20 October 1937. Thirteen of the 14 persons accused were sentenced to death.

In a spasm of violence that lasted nearly 18 months, Choibalsan's troika approved and carried out the execution of over 17,000 counterrevolutionary lamas. Monks that were not executed were forcibly laicized[32] while 746 of the country's monasteries were liquidated. Thousands more dissident intellectuals, political and government officials labelled "enemies of the revolution," as well as ethnic Buryats and Kazakhs were also rounded up and killed. Twenty-five persons from top positions in the party and government were executed, 187 from the military leadership, 36 of the 51 members of the Central Committee.[33] Following the Russian model, Choibalsan opened gulags in the countryside to imprison dissidents.[34] While the NKVD effectively managed the purge by staging show trials and carrying out executions,[35] a frequently intoxicated[36] Choibalsan was sometimes present during torture[36] and interrogations of suspected counterrevolutionaries, including old friends and comrades. Choibalsan rubber-stamped NKVD execution orders and at times personally directed executions.[33] He also added names of political enemies to NKVD arrest lists simply to settle old scores.[35][36]

End of the Great Terror edit

 
Genden
 
Amar
 
Dogsom
 
Losol
Notable victims of Choibalsan's purges include (from left); prime ministers P. Genden and A. Amar, and two of the founding members of the MPRP D. Dogsom and D. Losol

Racked with stress, Choibalsan spent six months (August 1938 – January 1939) recuperating and consulting with Voroshilov, Yezhov, and Stalin in Moscow and Sochi[37] while NKVD agents and Interior Ministry officials carried on purge operations from Ulaanbaatar. When he returned to Mongolia, Choibalsan followed Soviet directives and had the highly popular Prime Minister Amar purged. Choibalsan claimed he "had helped anti-government plotters, opposed their arrest, and neglected the defense of the borders. He betrayed his own country and was a traitor to the revolution."[38] After a coordinated propaganda campaign, Amar was arrested on 7 March 1939 and sent to the USSR, where he was later tried by a Soviet Troika and executed.

With Amar's removal, Choibalsan became Mongolia's uncontested leader, simultaneously holding the office Prime Minister, Minister for Internal Affairs, Minister of War, and Commander in Chief of the Mongolian armed forces. Secured in his position, Choibalsan brought the terror to an end in April 1939 by declaring that the excesses of the purges had been conducted by overzealous party officials while he was away in the USSR, but that he had overseen the arrests of the real criminals. Official blame for the purges fell on the deputy minister of internal affairs Nasantogtoh, and his former Soviet handler Kichikov. Later, other henchmen of the purge were arrested and executed, including Luvsansharav, Bayasgalan, Dashtseveg, and Luvsandorj. Dogsom and Losol, the last two living members (besides Choibalsan himself) of the original seven founding members of the MPRP, were also arrested.[39] Dogsom was executed in 1941. Losol died in a Soviet prison before his case came to trial.

World War II (1939–45) edit

Battles of Khalkhin Gol edit

 
Georgy Zhukov and Khorloogiin Choibalsan (left) consult during the Battle of Khalkhin Gol

In the spring of 1939, Japanese Kwantung Army military leaders moved to test the resolve of the Soviet and Mongolian militaries to protect disputed territory along Mongolia's southeast border with Japanese occupied Manchuria. Over the course of three battles (May – September 1939) a heavily armoured Soviet military force commanded by Georgy Zhukov decisively defeated the Japanese advance near the village of Nomonhan. There were nearly 8,000 casualties for both the Soviet and Japanese forces.[40] Nevertheless, the victory, which took place close to his birthplace, helped cement Choibalsan's growing cult of personality which portrayed him as a staunch defender of Mongolian independence against imperialist Japanese aggression.

Support for the Soviet Union edit

Choibalsan proclaimed his country's unwavering support for the Soviet Union after Germany's invasion of the USSR in June 1941, although Mongolia never officially declared war against Germany and waited until August 1945 to declare war against Japan. As early as 1939, Stalin had pushed Choibalsan to increase Mongolia's livestock population to 200 million as a source of raw materials for the Soviet Union in the event of war in Europe.[41] Throughout the conflict, the MPR's economy was re-calibrated to provide material support to the Soviet Union in the form of livestock, raw materials, money, food, military clothing, meat, sheepskin, felt boots, fur-lined coats, and funding for several Soviet military units. Choibalsan and the newly elected Secretary General of the MPRP Yumjaagiin Tsedenbal traveled to the front near Moscow to distribute gifts to Red Army troops.[41] Stalin awarded Choibalsan the Order of Lenin for his outstanding effort in organizing Mongolian people for the delivery of aid in goods to Red Army in July 1944.

Internal developments edit

Despite the privations of wartime, Choibalsan and party leaders pressed on with what limited social progress they could manage while delivering much of the country's economic output to the Soviets. Choibalsan consistently sought Moscow's assent before making key policy decisions, even in minor matters and made efforts to curry Moscow's favour whenever possible.[42] At the Tenth Party Congress in March to April 1940, Choibalsan arranged the purge of MPRP Secretary-General Baasanjav and had him replaced with a new favorite of Stalin's, 24-year-old Minister of Finance Yumjaagiin Tsedenbal. Although he relinquished leadership of the MPRP, Choibalsan continued to be the predominant force in Mongolian politics and pushed through reforms of the Mongolian constitution more in line with the 1936 USSR Constitution[43] that effectively ended the influence and power of Buddhist church.[41] Between 1941 and 1946 the country adopted Cyrillic script in place of the traditional Mongolian script. On 5 October 1942 Choibalsan University in Ulaanbaatar opened[44] financed largely by the Soviets and with courses taught in Russian.

End of the war and pan-Mongolian aspirations edit

 
Choibalsan hoped to unite ethnic Mongols in Inner Mongolia with the MPR

An ardent Mongolian nationalist, Choibalsan never gave up a hope of uniting all of the Mongols under the auspices of the Mongolian People's Republic. Until 1945 he had encouraged an ethnic insurgency in Eastern Xinjiang (with Stalin's support), looking to strengthening the MPR's influence in the region and possibly beyond to Gansu and Qinghai. He saw the impending defeat of Japan as an opportunity to realize his long-held dream of a "Great Mongolia", the uniting of Outer and Inner Mongolia, and he fully expected Stalin's backing as a reward for Mongolia's steadfast support of the Soviets during the war.[45] On 10 August 1945, Mongolia declared war on Japan two days after the Soviet Union and both armies joined forces to attack Japanese strongholds in northern China during the Manchurian Strategic Offensive Operation. At the same time, Choibalsan unleashed a brief wave of pan-Mongolist nationalism through the press, calling for unification and encouraging a grassroots pan-Mongolist movement in Inner Mongolia.[42] When Choibalsan ordered Mongolian troops to move south of the Great Wall as far as Zhangjiakou, Chengde and Batu-Khaalga, he was ordered by an angry Stalin to call them back.[46] Conversely, it also marked greater Mongolia's permanent division into an independent Mongolian People's Republic and a neighboring Inner Mongolia.

Post war edit

 
Choibalsan in military uniform at a military parade in the 1940s.

Modernisation efforts edit

With the end of the war, Mongolia embarked on a policy of "construction of the foundations of socialism." Proclaiming it "necessary to exterminate the concept of property,"[47] Choibalsan looked to modernize the country based on the Soviet model while expanding the communal agriculture sector. Funded largely through Soviet aid, the country's first five-year plan (1948–1952) focused on economic development, infrastructure construction, and doubling the country's livestock. Initiatives also were taken to redevelop the agrarian, industrial, transportation sectors. Under his government the Nalaikh Coal Mine, the electric grid, Züün Bayan petroleum factory, other metal and mineral factories, the Naushk-Ulaanbaatar railway and other transportation systems were developed[48] along with communications sectors, to establish modern mining, and improve education and health services. In addition to establishing the country's first major university, Choibalsan initiated policies to increase literacy rate and developed the 10 year elementary, middle and high school system. The 1949 Communist victory in China eliminated, at least temporarily, the threat on Mongolia's southern border, allowing the MPR to begin reducing its 80,000-strong army. Defense expenditures dropped from 33 percent of the total budget in 1948 to 15 percent in 1952.[49]

Establishing international recognition edit

Although Choibalsan maintained a policy of stronger ties with the Soviet Union (in February 1946 he renewed the 1936 Protocol Treaty of Friendship and Mutual Assistance for another ten years and concluded the first bilateral agreement on economic and cultural cooperation[50]), he nonetheless understood the importance solidifying Mongolia's independence through international recognition. In 1948 the MPR established diplomatic relations with the DPRK (North Korea) and then with the People's Republic of China in 1949 (Mongolia was the first country to recognize the PRC). In 1950 the Eastern Bloc Communist states of East Germany, Hungary, Poland, and Czechoslovakia all established formal relations with the MPR.

 
Choibalsan refused to attend Stalin's 70th-birthday celebration in 1949, sending Tsedenbal (far right) in his place.

Strengthening Party rule edit

While never reaching the frenzied levels of 1937–1939, arrests and executions of dissidents persisted until Choibalsan's death in 1952. Repressions were initiated in 1940, 1941, and 1942.[51] In 1947, a political scandal known as "Port-Arthur" was fabricated around a fictitious plot to assassinate Choibalsan; eighty people were arrested, 42 of whom were executed. The MPRP Central Committee issued proclamations to fight increased anti-revolutionary sentiment and Interior Ministry secret police cells sprouted throughout the country. Party allegiance was strengthened by growing membership in the MPRP. Membership doubled from 1940 to 1947, reaching nearly 28,000.[52]

Falling out with Stalin edit

Throughout his remaining years of life, Choibalsan continued to hold out hope of a united Mongolia especially after the victory of Chinese communists in 1949. When it became clear that Stalin would never back unification, he grew increasingly disillusioned with his former hero. Personal relations between the two leaders deteriorated to the point that by 1949 Choibalsan refused to attend Stalin's 70th-birthday celebration in Moscow, sending Tsedenbal in his place. When in 1950 Tsedenbal and other protégés urged Choibalsan to have Mongolia follow the example of Tuva and petition Moscow to be permitted to join the Soviet Union, Choibalsan severely rebuked them.[42][53]

Illness, death, and burial edit

 
Choibalsan's remains were interred in Sükhbaatar's mausoleum from 1954 until 2005

In late 1951 Choibalsan traveled to Moscow to receive treatment for kidney cancer.[54][better source needed] According to some sources, this was at the insistence of the Soviets due to the lack of equipment in Mongolia to treat the illness.[54] He was taken by train to the hospital for a week and he died there on 26 January 1952, soon after he had arrived.[54] Due to the falling out between himself and Stalin that preceded his stay in Moscow, it is often suspected that Choibalsan was killed by MGB agents.[54]

Choibalsan's body was returned by a special train to Mongolia with full military honors and was given a state funeral in the capital which was attended by Mongolian and Soviet officials alike.[54] Many days of mourning were declared throughout the country.[54] He was originally buried at the Altan Ulgii cemetery in Ulaanbaatar.[55] In July 1954 his body was moved to the newly built Mausoleum for Sükhbaatar in front of Government House on the north side of Sükhbaatar Square,[56] where the two lay until after the 1990 Democratic Revolution in Mongolia. The Mausoleum was torn down in 2005 and the corpses of both rulers were ritually cremated under the supervision of the Buddhist clergy, and the ashes entombed again at Altan Ulgii cemetery.[57]

Personal life edit

Choibalsan married a devout Buddhist seamstress named Borotologai in 1921 and the two remained married until 1935 despite his womanizing. In 1929 he began an affair with the actress Diwa (Dewee), after which Borotologai requested a divorce in 1935. Choibalsan then married a woman named B. Gündegmaa. He had no children with either of his wives. In 1937 Choibalsan adopted the son of one of his Interior Ministry subordinates, although rumors claimed that the boy was, in fact, Choibalsan's illegitimate child. Later Gündegmaa adopted a girl, Suwd.[17]

Legacy edit

 
Choibalsan's statue stands in front of the National University in Ulaanbaatar.

Choibalsan's image in modern Mongolia remains mixed. At the time of his death, he was widely mourned as a hero, a patriot, and ultimately a martyr for the cause of Mongolian independence. Remnants of his strong personality cult, as well as successful efforts by his successor Tsendenbal to obstruct "de-Stalinization" efforts that could have shed light on Choibalsan's actions during the purges, helped solidify the positive regard many Mongolians held of their former leader. Official criticisms of Choibalsan in 1956 and 1969, which blamed him for "crude violations of the revolutionary law [that] led to many people perishing,"[58] and even the MPRP Central Committee's 1962 decision, in lock-step with Khrushchev's anti-Stalinization policies, to take "decisive measures to ensure complete liquidation of the harmful consequences of Kh. Choibalsan's cult of personality in all spheres of life,"[59] failed to generate serious public discourse on the matter.[60]

Some scholars have suggested the inclination of Mongolians to avoid blaming Choibalsan for the purges is in effect an attempt to exonerate themselves for what happened.[61] Public anger over the violence of the purges falls predominantly on the Soviet Union and the NKVD, with Choibalsan viewed sympathetically (if not pathetically) as a puppet with little choice but to follow Moscow's instructions or else meet the fate of his predecessors Genden and Amar.

With the end of socialist rule in 1990, however, re-examining of Choibalsan's rule has occurred, and there does seem to be an attempt by some Mongolians to come to terms with the country's socialist past in a more general context. Nevertheless, Choibalsan is still not the object of strong resentment in Mongolia. That sentiment is reserved for the Soviet Union. Stalin's statue, for example, was removed from in front of the National Library in 1990, shortly after the Democratic revolution. Choibalsan's statue, on the other hand, still stands in front of the National University in Ulaanbaatar, an institution he helped found and that for a time bore his name. Moreover, the capital of Dornod aimag continues to carry his name.

As for Choibalsan's lasting influence, what is clear is that his aggressively pro-Russian stance and his active role in increasing Mongolia's economic, political, and social reliance on the Soviet Union turned the country into a Soviet dependency, which has had a lasting impact on modern Mongolian identity and development.[62] His decimation of the Buddhist clergy and numerous monasteries also robbed Mongolia of a rich cultural heritage.

In 2017, the Mongolian Bank unveiled a Khorloogiin Choibalsan coin.[63]

Awards edit

Foreign edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ /xɔːrˌlɡ ˈɔɪbəlsən/ khor-LOHG CHOI-bəl-sən; Mongolian: Хорлоогийн Чойбалсан, pronounced [χɔrˈɮɔɟiŋ ˈt͡ɕɞe̯pɐɬsɐɴ]

References edit

  1. ^ Sanders, Alan J. K. (1996). Historical Dictionary of Mongolia. Lanham: Scarecrow Press. p. 41. ISBN 0-8108-3077-9.
  2. ^ Atwood, Christopher P. (2004). Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire. New York: Facts on File inc. pp. 103. ISBN 0-8160-4671-9.
  3. ^ Atwood 2004, p. 103.
  4. ^ Baabar (1999). History of Mongolia. Cambridge: Monsudar Publishing. p. 198. ISBN 99929-0-038-5.
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External links edit

  • A Forgotten Purge by Timothy May, Department of History, University of Wisconsin–Madison
  • Mass grave uncovered in Mongolia RTÉ News, Thursday, 12 June 2003
  • Choibalsan delivering an address
Political offices
Preceded by President of Mongolia
24 January 1929 – 27 April 1930
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of Mongolia
24 March 1939 – 26 January 1952
Succeeded by

khorloogiin, choibalsan, other, uses, choibalsan, disambiguation, this, mongolian, name, given, name, choibalsan, khorloogiin, matronymic, family, name, february, 1895, january, 1952, mongolian, politician, served, leader, mongolian, people, republic, chairman. For other uses see Choibalsan disambiguation In this Mongolian name the given name is Choibalsan Khorloogiin is a matronymic not a family name Khorloogiin Choibalsan a 8 February 1895 26 January 1952 was a Mongolian politician who served as the leader of the Mongolian People s Republic as chairman of the Council of Ministers premier from 1939 until his death in 1952 He was also commander in chief of the Mongolian People s Army from 1937 and chairman of the Presidium of the State Little Khural head of state from 1929 to 1930 A close ally of Joseph Stalin Choibalsan led a dictatorship and organized Stalinist purges in Mongolia between 1937 and 1939 as head of the Ministry of Internal Affairs executing tens of thousands of Mongolian citizens Khorloogiin Choibalsanᠬᠣᠷᠯᠤ ᠠ ᠶᠢᠨ ᠴᠣᠢᠢᠪᠠᠯᠰᠠᠩ Horloogijn ChojbalsanChoibalsan in the 1940s10th Chairman of the Council of MinistersIn office 24 March 1939 26 January 1952General SecretaryBanzarjavyn BaasanjavDashiin DambaYumjaagiin TsedenbalPreceded byAnandyn AmarSucceeded byYumjaagiin Tsedenbal4th Chairman of the Presidium of the State Little HuralIn office 24 January 1929 27 April 1930General SecretaryOlziin BadrakhBat Ochiryn Eldev OchirPeljidiin GendenPreceded byJamtsangiin DamdinsurenSucceeded byLosolyn LaaganPersonal detailsBornKhorloogiin Dugar 1895 02 08 8 February 1895Achit Beysiyn Outer Mongolia Qing ChinaDied26 January 1952 1952 01 26 aged 56 Moscow RSFSR Soviet UnionResting placeAltan Olgii National CemeteryNationalityMongolianPolitical partyMongolian People s Revolutionary PartySpouse s Borotologai 1921 1935 B Gundegmaa 1935 1952 Military serviceAllegiance Mongolian People s RepublicBranch serviceMongolian People s ArmyYears of service1921 1952RankMarshalCommandsAll supreme commander Battles warsMongolian Revolution of 1921World War IIAwardsForeign Choibalsan was one of the 1921 Mongolian revolutionaries and held several political and military roles in the 1920s His rise to power in the 1930s was personally orchestrated by Stalin and his rule was maintained by a repressive state and cult of personality Mongolia s economic political and military ties to the Soviet Union deepened though after World War II Choibalsan supported pan Mongolian unification with Inner Mongolia He died of cancer in Moscow in 1952 and was succeeded as leader by his protege Yumjaagiin Tsedenbal Contents 1 Early life 2 Mongolian Revolution of 1921 2 1 Formation of the Mongolian People s Party 2 2 Contact with Soviets and the first MPP Congress 2 3 Defeat of Ungern Sternberg 3 Rise to power 3 1 Purge of Bodoo 3 2 Right Opportunism 1925 28 3 3 Leftist Period 1928 1932 3 4 Lkhumbe Affair 4 Great Terror 4 1 Purge of Genden 4 2 Death of Marshal Demid 4 3 10 September 1937 4 4 End of the Great Terror 5 World War II 1939 45 5 1 Battles of Khalkhin Gol 5 2 Support for the Soviet Union 5 3 Internal developments 5 4 End of the war and pan Mongolian aspirations 6 Post war 6 1 Modernisation efforts 6 2 Establishing international recognition 6 3 Strengthening Party rule 6 4 Falling out with Stalin 7 Illness death and burial 8 Personal life 9 Legacy 10 Awards 10 1 Foreign 11 Notes 12 References 13 External linksEarly life editChoibalsan was born on 8 February 1895 in Achit Beysiyn near present day Choibalsan Dornod Province 1 He was the youngest of four children born to a poor unmarried herdswoman named Khorloo the name Khorloogiin is a matronymic His father was likely a Barga tribes man Daur Mongol from Inner Mongolia called Jamsu but Choibalsan claimed to be unaware of his identity 2 Named Dugar at birth he assumed the religious name Choibalsan at age 13 after entering the local Buddhist monastery of San Beysiyn Khuree 3 where he trained to be a Lamaist monk Five years later he fled to Khuree also known as Urga present day Ulaanbaatar with another novice where he worked odd jobs In part to prevent him from being returned to the monastery a sympathetic Buryat teacher named Nikolai Danchinov had him enrolled in the Russian consulate s Russian Mongolian Translators School 4 A year later he was sent on at public expense to study at a gymnasium in Irkutsk Russia from 1914 to 1917 Mongolian Revolution of 1921 editMain article Mongolian Revolution of 1921 Formation of the Mongolian People s Party edit nbsp The Russian Consulate in Khuree played a central role in Choibalsan s early development nbsp Sukhbaatar left with Choibalsan in the early 1920sChoibalsan and fellow Mongolian students in Russia were called back to Khuree by the Bogd Khaan government following the 1917 October Revolution Exposed to Bolshevism while living among Irkutsk s radicalized student population 5 Choibalsan joined the revolutionary Consular Hill or Konsulyn Denj Konsulyn denzh group heavily influenced by Bolshevist philosophy and established to resist the Chinese occupation of Outer Mongolia after 1919 Original members of the group also included Dambyn Chagdarjav and Darizavyn Losol 6 Dogsomyn Bodoo the group s leader was a former teacher and mentor of Choibalsan s at the Russian Mongolian School for Translators 7 With his serviceable Russian Choibalsan served as the group s translator with contacts at the Russian Consulate Those contacts later encouraged Konsulyn Denj to join forces with the more nationalist oriented resistance group Zuun Khuree East Khuree which counted Soliin Danzan Dansrabilegiin Dogsom and Damdin Sukhbaatar among its members On 25 June 1920 8 the new body adopted the name Mongolian People s Party MPP In 1924 the party renamed itself the Mongolian People s Revolutionary Party or MPRP after the death of the Bogd Khaan and the formal proclamation of the Mongolian People s Republic MPR Contact with Soviets and the first MPP Congress edit In late June 1920 Choibalsan and Danzan embarked for Irkutsk they were later joined by Losol Chagdarjav Dogsom L Dendev and Sukhbaatar the famous First Seven to establish contacts with the Soviets and seek assistance in their struggle for independence Choibalsan and Sukhbaatar remained together in Irkutsk for several months raising awareness of Mongolia s plight and receiving military training During this period Sukhbaatar gradually became a second mentor to Choibalsan 9 While the group of seven continued their lobbying efforts in Soviet Russia forces commanded by the anti Bolshevik Russian warlord Roman von Ungern Sternberg invaded Mongolia from the east and ejected occupying Chinese garrisons from Khuree in February 1921 No longer faced with directly confronting the Chinese in Mongolia the Soviets finally threw their backing behind the Mongolian revolutionaries Choibalsan and Sukhbaatar relocated to Troitskosavsk modern day Kyakhta on the Russian Mongolian border to coordinate revolutionary activities and recruit Mongolian fighters Choibalsan secretly ventured as far as Khuree to consult with MPP supporters enlist fighters and spirit members of Sukhbaatar s family back to Troitskosavsk 10 At a Soviet organized MPP conference held secretly in Troitskosavsk from 1 to 3 March 1921 subsequently regarded as the first congress of the Mongolian People s Revolutionary Party Choibalsan was elected a member of the provisional revolutionary government He was also appointed Political Commissar Deputy Chief and chief propagandist of the Mongol Ardyn Huv sgalt Tsereg Mongolian Mongol Ardyn Huvsgalt Cereg or the Mongolian People s Army commanded by Sukhbaatar 11 Defeat of Ungern Sternberg edit Within days Sukhbaatar s Mongolian partisan army now numbering 400 men defeated the larger but demoralized Chinese garrison that had fled to Kyakhta Maimaicheng modern day Altanbulag Joint Mongol and Red Army forces directly confronted Ungern s troops in a series of battles near Troitskosavsk from late May to mid June Choibalsan took command of a Mongolian detachment based in Tariat in modern day Arkhangai province 12 and together with the Russian forces commanded by Petr Efimovich Shchetinkin fought right guard actions in western Mongolia in support of the main Russian Mongolia advance through modern day Selenge and Tov provinces After small skirmishes with Ungern s remaining guard units the joint Russian Mongol force entered Khuree unchallenged on 6 July 1921 Choibalsan pursued remnants of Ungern s army and was likely on hand at Ungern s capture by Shchetinkin on 22 August 1921 13 Rise to power editAfter the revolution Choibalsan remained Deputy Chief of the Mongolian People s Army while also being elected Chairman of the Mongolian Revolutionary Youth League MRYL 11 Despite his credentials as one of the MPP s founding members he failed to advance beyond second tier government posts throughout the 1920s 14 His heavy drinking womanizing and violent temperament alienated him from party leaders and at one point in the early 1930s he was temporarily demoted from being Minister of Foreign Affairs to the role of simple Museum Director While he often gravitated towards the leftist faction of the party he was suspected of being a rightist in what little mention is made of him in Soviet and Mongolian reports of the era 14 Choibalsan himself did not include many of his own speeches from this period in his collected works indicating his role during this period was not a prominent one It was not until members of the Soviet security apparatus such as Soviet Commissar for Defense Kliment Voroshilov took note of Choibalsan s political usefulness in the late 1920s and early 1930s that his career prospects began to improve 15 Purge of Bodoo edit In late 1921 Choibalsan s MRYL foot soldiers carried out Prime Minister Bodoo s modernization campaign of forcibly cutting off feudal ornaments from Mongolian clothing large cuffs women s jewelry long hair etc 16 The angry public backlash led to Bodoo s purge and eventual execution in August 1922 while Choibalsan was stripped of both full party membership and his position of as deputy commander of the Mongolian military Only Sukhbaatar s intervention saved him from Bodoo s fate 17 Choibalsan was sent to a Moscow Russian Military Academy after Sukhbaatar s death in 1923 18 and when he returned to Ulaanbaatar a year later was offered his old mentor s former position as Commander in Chief of the People s Revolutionary Troops He also held positions as a member of the Presidium of the State Great Hural from 1924 to 1928 and as a member of the MPRP Central Committee Right Opportunism 1925 28 edit At the Third Party Congress in 1924 Choibalsan sided with the leftist leader Rinchingiin Elbegdorj as left and right wing factions of the MPRP called for the arrest and execution of moderate party leader Danzan who was accused of protecting bourgeois interests and engaging in business with Chinese firms 19 Following Danzan s death Choibalsan and Rinchino s political influence diminished 20 as the party s right wing led by Tseren Ochiryn Dambadorj assumed control and during a period later referred to as the Right Opportunism 1925 1928 promoted rightist policies mirroring Lenin s New Economic Policy in the Soviet Union Leftist Period 1928 1932 edit nbsp Choibalsan circa 1925The rise of Josef Stalin and termination of Lenin s New Economic Policy influenced political developments in the MPR with the 1928 MPRP Seventh Party Congress ushering in the Leftist Period Soviet advisors arranged for Choibalsan to be kicked upstairs to be Chairman of the Little Hural i e titular head of state 17 from where in 1929 and 1930 he supported implementation of Soviet backed leftist policies of more rapid collectivization land expropriation and persecution of the Buddhist faith At the Eighth Party Congress in 1930 Choibalsan contributed to a ramping up leftist socialist reforms when again encouraged by Soviet agents he introduced personally formulated decrees that intensified land confiscation and forced collectivization measures 21 His appointment in 1931 as Minister of Livestock and Agriculture a position he held until 1935 gave him even greater authority to enforce the policies Traditional herders were forced off the steppe and into badly managed collective farms destroying one third of Mongolian livestock 22 Over 800 properties belonging to the nobility and the Buddhist faith were confiscated and over 700 head of mostly noble households were executed 23 Under Stalinist influence in the Mongolian People s Republic an estimated 17 000 monks were killed official figures show 24 The government s aggressive measures ultimately lead to brutal armed uprisings in Khovsgol Arkhangai Ovorkhangai and Zavkhan provinces in 1932 In reaction Moscow ordered a temporary curtailment of economic centralization efforts Comintern agents counted on Choibalsan to be a strong advocate for its New Turn policy to correct the excesses of the Left Deviation when it was introduced in an extraordinary plenum of the MPRP Central Committee in June 1932 Later MPR histories would credit Choibalsan with being the first to criticize the leftist period and propose reforms but these were mere fabrications meant to build up Choibalsan s cult of personality 25 Lkhumbe Affair edit nbsp Jambyn LkhumbeIn the summer of 1934 Choibalsan s name surfaced during interrogations of party members arrested as part of the Lkhumbe Affair a manufactured conspiracy in which MPRP General Secretary Jambyn Lkhumbe and other MPRP elements particularly Buryat Mongols were falsely accused of conspiring with Japanese spies The invasion of neighboring Manchuria by Japanese forces in 1931 had raised fears in Ulaanbaatar and Moscow alike of possible Japanese military expansion into Mongolia and the Soviet Far East Over 1 500 people were implicated in the purge and 56 were executed Choibalsan was called to Moscow where he was arrested and interrogated regarding his possible involvement Within days however he was cooperating with the NKVD in the interrogation and torture of fellow Mongolians 15 Satisfied with his loyalty Stalin ordered Mongolia s Prime Minister Peljidiin Genden to appoint Choibalsan as deputy prime minister Genden vigorously objected but to no avail As relations between Genden and Stalin soured Choibalsan s influence with Moscow increased In 1935 as a public sign of his favor Stalin gifted Choibalsan 20 GAZ automobiles which he distributed among Mongolian power players to increase his prestige 26 Great Terror editMain article Stalinist repressions in Mongolia Purge of Genden edit In 1936 Choibalsan and Gelegdorjiin Demid were appointed Marshals of the Armed Forces while Choibalsan also became head of the newly elevated Ministry of Internal Affairs 26 percent of whose staff were NKVD agents 27 Acting under Moscow s directive Choibalsan then had Genden purged in March 1936 for sabotaging Mongol Soviet relations by rejecting Stalin s demand that he eliminate the country s Buddhist clergy 28 Genden was removed from his offices of the prime minister and foreign minister arrested and sent to Moscow where he was executed a year later Anandyn Amar became Prime Minister in his place Over the next three years Soviet mentors in the Ministry of Internal Affairs guided Choibalsan in planning and carrying out the Great Terror Possibly advised by a Soviet Official Chopyak 27 Choibalsan had Internal Affairs Committee rules amended in May 1936 to facilitate the detention of high ranking politicians without first consulting political superiors Soon thereafter 23 high ranking lamas were arrested for participating in a counter revolutionary centre Following a yearlong trial they were publicly executed in early October 1937 When Mongolia s Procurator General protested the lamas prosecution he too was arrested and then shot 29 Death of Marshal Demid edit nbsp Deputy NKVD Chief Mikhail FrinovskyIn August 1937 the 36 year old Marshal Demid whose popularity Choibalsan had always resented 29 died under suspicious circumstances resulting in Choibalsan s promotion to the dual role of sole Commander in Chief of the Mongolian military and Minister of Defense The following day Choibalsan as Interior Minister issued Order 366 which declared that many in Mongolia had fallen under the influence of Japanese spies and provocateurs That same month Stalin alarmed by Japanese military movements in Manchuria 30 ordered the stationing of 30 000 Red Army troops in Mongolia and had dispatched a large Soviet delegation to Ulaanbaatar under Soviet Deputy NKVD Commissar Mikhail Frinovsky Frinovsky was charged with setting in motion the violent purges that he had so effectively carried out in the Soviet Union under NKVD Chief Nikolai Yezhov Working through Soviet advisers already embedded within the Ministry of Interior and with a willing Choibalsan providing symbolic cover Frinovsky built the purge framework from behind the scenes producing arrest lists and creating an NKVD style Troika headed by Choibalsan to try suspects nbsp The ruins of Manzushir Khiid one of several hundred Buddhist monasteries destroyed during the purge 10 September 1937 edit The arrest of 65 high ranking government officials and intelligentsia on the night of 10 September 1937 signaled the launch of the purges in earnest All were accused of spying for Japan as part of a Genden Demid plot and most confessed under intense torture 31 The first show trial was staged at the Central Theatre from 18 to 20 October 1937 Thirteen of the 14 persons accused were sentenced to death In a spasm of violence that lasted nearly 18 months Choibalsan s troika approved and carried out the execution of over 17 000 counterrevolutionary lamas Monks that were not executed were forcibly laicized 32 while 746 of the country s monasteries were liquidated Thousands more dissident intellectuals political and government officials labelled enemies of the revolution as well as ethnic Buryats and Kazakhs were also rounded up and killed Twenty five persons from top positions in the party and government were executed 187 from the military leadership 36 of the 51 members of the Central Committee 33 Following the Russian model Choibalsan opened gulags in the countryside to imprison dissidents 34 While the NKVD effectively managed the purge by staging show trials and carrying out executions 35 a frequently intoxicated 36 Choibalsan was sometimes present during torture 36 and interrogations of suspected counterrevolutionaries including old friends and comrades Choibalsan rubber stamped NKVD execution orders and at times personally directed executions 33 He also added names of political enemies to NKVD arrest lists simply to settle old scores 35 36 End of the Great Terror edit nbsp Genden nbsp Amar nbsp Dogsom nbsp LosolNotable victims of Choibalsan s purges include from left prime ministers P Genden and A Amar and two of the founding members of the MPRP D Dogsom and D Losol Racked with stress Choibalsan spent six months August 1938 January 1939 recuperating and consulting with Voroshilov Yezhov and Stalin in Moscow and Sochi 37 while NKVD agents and Interior Ministry officials carried on purge operations from Ulaanbaatar When he returned to Mongolia Choibalsan followed Soviet directives and had the highly popular Prime Minister Amar purged Choibalsan claimed he had helped anti government plotters opposed their arrest and neglected the defense of the borders He betrayed his own country and was a traitor to the revolution 38 After a coordinated propaganda campaign Amar was arrested on 7 March 1939 and sent to the USSR where he was later tried by a Soviet Troika and executed With Amar s removal Choibalsan became Mongolia s uncontested leader simultaneously holding the office Prime Minister Minister for Internal Affairs Minister of War and Commander in Chief of the Mongolian armed forces Secured in his position Choibalsan brought the terror to an end in April 1939 by declaring that the excesses of the purges had been conducted by overzealous party officials while he was away in the USSR but that he had overseen the arrests of the real criminals Official blame for the purges fell on the deputy minister of internal affairs Nasantogtoh and his former Soviet handler Kichikov Later other henchmen of the purge were arrested and executed including Luvsansharav Bayasgalan Dashtseveg and Luvsandorj Dogsom and Losol the last two living members besides Choibalsan himself of the original seven founding members of the MPRP were also arrested 39 Dogsom was executed in 1941 Losol died in a Soviet prison before his case came to trial World War II 1939 45 editBattles of Khalkhin Gol edit Main article Battles of Khalkhin Gol nbsp Georgy Zhukov and Khorloogiin Choibalsan left consult during the Battle of Khalkhin GolIn the spring of 1939 Japanese Kwantung Army military leaders moved to test the resolve of the Soviet and Mongolian militaries to protect disputed territory along Mongolia s southeast border with Japanese occupied Manchuria Over the course of three battles May September 1939 a heavily armoured Soviet military force commanded by Georgy Zhukov decisively defeated the Japanese advance near the village of Nomonhan There were nearly 8 000 casualties for both the Soviet and Japanese forces 40 Nevertheless the victory which took place close to his birthplace helped cement Choibalsan s growing cult of personality which portrayed him as a staunch defender of Mongolian independence against imperialist Japanese aggression Support for the Soviet Union edit Choibalsan proclaimed his country s unwavering support for the Soviet Union after Germany s invasion of the USSR in June 1941 although Mongolia never officially declared war against Germany and waited until August 1945 to declare war against Japan As early as 1939 Stalin had pushed Choibalsan to increase Mongolia s livestock population to 200 million as a source of raw materials for the Soviet Union in the event of war in Europe 41 Throughout the conflict the MPR s economy was re calibrated to provide material support to the Soviet Union in the form of livestock raw materials money food military clothing meat sheepskin felt boots fur lined coats and funding for several Soviet military units Choibalsan and the newly elected Secretary General of the MPRP Yumjaagiin Tsedenbal traveled to the front near Moscow to distribute gifts to Red Army troops 41 Stalin awarded Choibalsan the Order of Lenin for his outstanding effort in organizing Mongolian people for the delivery of aid in goods to Red Army in July 1944 Internal developments edit Despite the privations of wartime Choibalsan and party leaders pressed on with what limited social progress they could manage while delivering much of the country s economic output to the Soviets Choibalsan consistently sought Moscow s assent before making key policy decisions even in minor matters and made efforts to curry Moscow s favour whenever possible 42 At the Tenth Party Congress in March to April 1940 Choibalsan arranged the purge of MPRP Secretary General Baasanjav and had him replaced with a new favorite of Stalin s 24 year old Minister of Finance Yumjaagiin Tsedenbal Although he relinquished leadership of the MPRP Choibalsan continued to be the predominant force in Mongolian politics and pushed through reforms of the Mongolian constitution more in line with the 1936 USSR Constitution 43 that effectively ended the influence and power of Buddhist church 41 Between 1941 and 1946 the country adopted Cyrillic script in place of the traditional Mongolian script On 5 October 1942 Choibalsan University in Ulaanbaatar opened 44 financed largely by the Soviets and with courses taught in Russian End of the war and pan Mongolian aspirations edit nbsp Choibalsan hoped to unite ethnic Mongols in Inner Mongolia with the MPRAn ardent Mongolian nationalist Choibalsan never gave up a hope of uniting all of the Mongols under the auspices of the Mongolian People s Republic Until 1945 he had encouraged an ethnic insurgency in Eastern Xinjiang with Stalin s support looking to strengthening the MPR s influence in the region and possibly beyond to Gansu and Qinghai He saw the impending defeat of Japan as an opportunity to realize his long held dream of a Great Mongolia the uniting of Outer and Inner Mongolia and he fully expected Stalin s backing as a reward for Mongolia s steadfast support of the Soviets during the war 45 On 10 August 1945 Mongolia declared war on Japan two days after the Soviet Union and both armies joined forces to attack Japanese strongholds in northern China during the Manchurian Strategic Offensive Operation At the same time Choibalsan unleashed a brief wave of pan Mongolist nationalism through the press calling for unification and encouraging a grassroots pan Mongolist movement in Inner Mongolia 42 When Choibalsan ordered Mongolian troops to move south of the Great Wall as far as Zhangjiakou Chengde and Batu Khaalga he was ordered by an angry Stalin to call them back 46 Conversely it also marked greater Mongolia s permanent division into an independent Mongolian People s Republic and a neighboring Inner Mongolia Post war edit nbsp Choibalsan in military uniform at a military parade in the 1940s Modernisation efforts edit With the end of the war Mongolia embarked on a policy of construction of the foundations of socialism Proclaiming it necessary to exterminate the concept of property 47 Choibalsan looked to modernize the country based on the Soviet model while expanding the communal agriculture sector Funded largely through Soviet aid the country s first five year plan 1948 1952 focused on economic development infrastructure construction and doubling the country s livestock Initiatives also were taken to redevelop the agrarian industrial transportation sectors Under his government the Nalaikh Coal Mine the electric grid Zuun Bayan petroleum factory other metal and mineral factories the Naushk Ulaanbaatar railway and other transportation systems were developed 48 along with communications sectors to establish modern mining and improve education and health services In addition to establishing the country s first major university Choibalsan initiated policies to increase literacy rate and developed the 10 year elementary middle and high school system The 1949 Communist victory in China eliminated at least temporarily the threat on Mongolia s southern border allowing the MPR to begin reducing its 80 000 strong army Defense expenditures dropped from 33 percent of the total budget in 1948 to 15 percent in 1952 49 Establishing international recognition edit Although Choibalsan maintained a policy of stronger ties with the Soviet Union in February 1946 he renewed the 1936 Protocol Treaty of Friendship and Mutual Assistance for another ten years and concluded the first bilateral agreement on economic and cultural cooperation 50 he nonetheless understood the importance solidifying Mongolia s independence through international recognition In 1948 the MPR established diplomatic relations with the DPRK North Korea and then with the People s Republic of China in 1949 Mongolia was the first country to recognize the PRC In 1950 the Eastern Bloc Communist states of East Germany Hungary Poland and Czechoslovakia all established formal relations with the MPR nbsp Choibalsan refused to attend Stalin s 70th birthday celebration in 1949 sending Tsedenbal far right in his place Strengthening Party rule edit While never reaching the frenzied levels of 1937 1939 arrests and executions of dissidents persisted until Choibalsan s death in 1952 Repressions were initiated in 1940 1941 and 1942 51 In 1947 a political scandal known as Port Arthur was fabricated around a fictitious plot to assassinate Choibalsan eighty people were arrested 42 of whom were executed The MPRP Central Committee issued proclamations to fight increased anti revolutionary sentiment and Interior Ministry secret police cells sprouted throughout the country Party allegiance was strengthened by growing membership in the MPRP Membership doubled from 1940 to 1947 reaching nearly 28 000 52 Falling out with Stalin edit Throughout his remaining years of life Choibalsan continued to hold out hope of a united Mongolia especially after the victory of Chinese communists in 1949 When it became clear that Stalin would never back unification he grew increasingly disillusioned with his former hero Personal relations between the two leaders deteriorated to the point that by 1949 Choibalsan refused to attend Stalin s 70th birthday celebration in Moscow sending Tsedenbal in his place When in 1950 Tsedenbal and other proteges urged Choibalsan to have Mongolia follow the example of Tuva and petition Moscow to be permitted to join the Soviet Union Choibalsan severely rebuked them 42 53 Illness death and burial edit nbsp Choibalsan s remains were interred in Sukhbaatar s mausoleum from 1954 until 2005In late 1951 Choibalsan traveled to Moscow to receive treatment for kidney cancer 54 better source needed According to some sources this was at the insistence of the Soviets due to the lack of equipment in Mongolia to treat the illness 54 He was taken by train to the hospital for a week and he died there on 26 January 1952 soon after he had arrived 54 Due to the falling out between himself and Stalin that preceded his stay in Moscow it is often suspected that Choibalsan was killed by MGB agents 54 Choibalsan s body was returned by a special train to Mongolia with full military honors and was given a state funeral in the capital which was attended by Mongolian and Soviet officials alike 54 Many days of mourning were declared throughout the country 54 He was originally buried at the Altan Ulgii cemetery in Ulaanbaatar 55 In July 1954 his body was moved to the newly built Mausoleum for Sukhbaatar in front of Government House on the north side of Sukhbaatar Square 56 where the two lay until after the 1990 Democratic Revolution in Mongolia The Mausoleum was torn down in 2005 and the corpses of both rulers were ritually cremated under the supervision of the Buddhist clergy and the ashes entombed again at Altan Ulgii cemetery 57 Personal life editChoibalsan married a devout Buddhist seamstress named Borotologai in 1921 and the two remained married until 1935 despite his womanizing In 1929 he began an affair with the actress Diwa Dewee after which Borotologai requested a divorce in 1935 Choibalsan then married a woman named B Gundegmaa He had no children with either of his wives In 1937 Choibalsan adopted the son of one of his Interior Ministry subordinates although rumors claimed that the boy was in fact Choibalsan s illegitimate child Later Gundegmaa adopted a girl Suwd 17 Legacy edit nbsp Choibalsan s statue stands in front of the National University in Ulaanbaatar Choibalsan s image in modern Mongolia remains mixed At the time of his death he was widely mourned as a hero a patriot and ultimately a martyr for the cause of Mongolian independence Remnants of his strong personality cult as well as successful efforts by his successor Tsendenbal to obstruct de Stalinization efforts that could have shed light on Choibalsan s actions during the purges helped solidify the positive regard many Mongolians held of their former leader Official criticisms of Choibalsan in 1956 and 1969 which blamed him for crude violations of the revolutionary law that led to many people perishing 58 and even the MPRP Central Committee s 1962 decision in lock step with Khrushchev s anti Stalinization policies to take decisive measures to ensure complete liquidation of the harmful consequences of Kh Choibalsan s cult of personality in all spheres of life 59 failed to generate serious public discourse on the matter 60 Some scholars have suggested the inclination of Mongolians to avoid blaming Choibalsan for the purges is in effect an attempt to exonerate themselves for what happened 61 Public anger over the violence of the purges falls predominantly on the Soviet Union and the NKVD with Choibalsan viewed sympathetically if not pathetically as a puppet with little choice but to follow Moscow s instructions or else meet the fate of his predecessors Genden and Amar With the end of socialist rule in 1990 however re examining of Choibalsan s rule has occurred and there does seem to be an attempt by some Mongolians to come to terms with the country s socialist past in a more general context Nevertheless Choibalsan is still not the object of strong resentment in Mongolia That sentiment is reserved for the Soviet Union Stalin s statue for example was removed from in front of the National Library in 1990 shortly after the Democratic revolution Choibalsan s statue on the other hand still stands in front of the National University in Ulaanbaatar an institution he helped found and that for a time bore his name Moreover the capital of Dornod aimag continues to carry his name As for Choibalsan s lasting influence what is clear is that his aggressively pro Russian stance and his active role in increasing Mongolia s economic political and social reliance on the Soviet Union turned the country into a Soviet dependency which has had a lasting impact on modern Mongolian identity and development 62 His decimation of the Buddhist clergy and numerous monasteries also robbed Mongolia of a rich cultural heritage In 2017 the Mongolian Bank unveiled a Khorloogiin Choibalsan coin 63 Awards editHero of the Mongolian People s Republic twice Order of Sukhbaatar four times Order of the Red Banner five times Order of the Red Banner of Labour Order of the Polar Star Medal For Victory over Japan Medal for Victory over Japan We won Medal 25 Years of the People s Revolution Foreign edit Orders of Lenin twice Order of Suvorov 1st degree Orders of the Red Banner twice Jubilee Medal XX Years of the Workers and Peasants Red Army Medal For the Victory over Germany in the Great Patriotic War 1941 1945 Medal For the Victory over Japan Jubilee Medal 30 Years of the Soviet Army and Navy Honorary Weapon Honored Worker of the NKVD of the USSRNotes edit x ɔːr ˌ l oʊ ɡ ˈ tʃ ɔɪ b e l s e n khor LOHG CHOI bel sen Mongolian Horloogijn Chojbalsan pronounced xɔrˈɮɔɟiŋ ˈt ɕɞe pɐɬsɐɴ References edit Sanders Alan J K 1996 Historical Dictionary of Mongolia Lanham Scarecrow Press p 41 ISBN 0 8108 3077 9 Atwood Christopher P 2004 Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire New York Facts on File inc pp 103 ISBN 0 8160 4671 9 Atwood 2004 p 103 Baabar 1999 History of Mongolia Cambridge Monsudar Publishing p 198 ISBN 99929 0 038 5 Znamenski Andrei A 2011 Red Shambhala Magic Prophecy and Geopolitics in the Heart of Asia Quest Books p 131 ISBN 978 0 8356 0891 6 Bawden C R 1989 The Modern History of Mongolia London Kegan Paul International Ltd pp 206 ISBN 0 7103 0326 2 Baabar 1999 p 198 Kh Choibalsan D Losol D Demid Mongolyn ardyn undesnii khuv sgal ankh uuseg baiguulagdsan tovch tuukh A short history of the Mongolian revolution Ulaanbaatar 1934 v 1 p 56 Bawden 1989 p 215 Bagaryn Shirendyb et al 1976 History of the Mongolian People s Republic Cambridge MA Harvard University Press pp 99 ISBN 0 674 39862 9 a b Sanders 1996 p 42 Bagaryn Shirendyb et al 1976 p 137 Palmer James 2008 The Bloody White Baron London Faber and Faber p 226 ISBN 978 0 571 23023 5 a b Bawden 1989 p 292 a b Baabar 1999 p 351 Baabar 1999 p 231 a b c Atwood 2004 p 104 Rupen Robert Arthur 1979 How Mongolia Is Really Ruled U S Hoover Institution Press p 31 ISBN 0 8179 7122 X Sanders 1996 p 52 Lattimore Owen 1962 Nomads and Commissars Mongolia Revisited Oxford University Press p 119 ISBN 1 258 08610 7 Bawden 1989 p 293 Palmer James 2008 The Bloody White Baron London Faber and Faber p 235 ISBN 978 0 571 23023 5 Becker Jasper 1992 Lost Country Mongolia Revealed London Hodder and Stoughton p 123 ISBN 0 340 55665 X Thomas Natalie 4 June 2018 Young monks lead revival of Buddhism in Mongolia after years of repression Reuters Retrieved 6 July 2023 Bawden 1989 p 292 293 Baabar 1999 p 352 a b Baabar 1999 p 353 Baabar 1999 p 348 a b Baabar 1999 p 355 Baabar 1999 p 359 Baabar 1999 p 361 quoting N Erdene Ochir Extra Special Commission Ardyn Erh No 153 1991 Palmer James 2008 The Bloody White Baron London Faber and Faber p 237 ISBN 978 0 571 23023 5 a b Baabar 1999 p 362 Sandag Shagdariin 2000 Poisoned arrows The Stalin Choibalsan Mongolian massacres 1921 1941 University of Michigan pp 70 ISBN 0 8133 3710 0 a b Baabar 1999 p 358 a b c Becker 1992 p 95 Baabar 1999 p 365 Coox Alvin D 1990 Nomonhan Japan Against Russia 1939 Volumes 1 2 Stanford University Press p 170 ISBN 0 8047 1835 0 Baabar 1999 p 370 Krivosheeva G F 1993 Grif sekretnosti sniat poteri Vooruzhennykh Sil SSSR v voynakh boevykh deystviyakh i voennykh konfliktakh Moscow Voennoe izd vo pp 77 85 ISBN 5 203 01400 0 a b c Robert L Worden Andrea Matles Savada eds Economic Gradualism and National Defense 1932 45 Mongolia A Country Study GPO for the Library of Congress Retrieved 26 November 2012 a b c Atwood 2004 p 105 Ginsburgs G 1961 Mongolia s Socialist Constitution Pacific Affairs 34 2 141 156 doi 10 2307 2752987 JSTOR 2752987 Bagaryn Shirendyb et al 1976 p 826 Radchenko Sergey Carving up the Steppes Borders Territory and Nationalism in Mongolia 1943 1949 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 12 January 2014 Retrieved 26 November 2012 Becker 1992 p 96 Morozova Irina Y 2009 Socialist Revolutions in Asia The Social History of Mongolia in the 20th Century US 2009 Taylor amp Francis p 124 ISBN 978 0 7103 1351 5 Morozova 2009 p 126 Mongolia Postwar Developments Retrieved 26 November 2012 Chahryar Adle Madhavan K Palat Anara Tabyshalieva eds 2005 Vol VI Towards Contemporary Civilization From the Mid Nineteenth Century to the Present Time UNESCO p 371 ISBN 92 3 102719 0 Morozova 2009 p 105 Morozova 2009 p 120 Becker 1992 p 97 a b c d e f Baabar Chojbalsan taalal togsov Sonin MN Archived from the original on 12 March 2022 Retrieved 20 June 2021 Olloo mn Yedyer bvr delhij dayaar D Svhbaatar H Chojbalsan Zh Sambuu nart zoriulsan bunhan barina archive olloo mn Archived from the original on 8 September 2022 Retrieved 20 June 2021 Progulka po mavzoleyam www kommersant ru in Russian 1 June 1999 Retrieved 20 June 2021 1960 2014 ony Ulaanbaatar hot mass mn Retrieved 20 June 2021 Bagaryn Shirendyb et al 1976 p 345 Lattimore 1962 p 148 Kenneth Christie Robert Cribb Robert B Cribb 2002 pg 161 Kenneth Christie Robert Cribb Robert B Cribb 2002 pg 162 Atwood 2004 p 60 Bank of Mongolia Coins Archived from the original on 14 December 2020 Retrieved 9 March 2019 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Khorloogiin Choibalsan nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Khorloogiin Choibalsan A Forgotten Purge by Timothy May Department of History University of Wisconsin Madison Mass grave uncovered in Mongolia RTE News Thursday 12 June 2003 Choibalsan delivering an addressPolitical officesPreceded byJamtsangiin Damdinsuren President of Mongolia24 January 1929 27 April 1930 Succeeded byLosolyn LaaganPreceded byAnandyn Amar Prime Minister of Mongolia24 March 1939 26 January 1952 Succeeded byYumjaagiin Tsedenbal Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Khorloogiin Choibalsan amp oldid 1192964396, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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