Abstract

Geographically Mongolia has two neighbors. Mongolia’s existence today depends largely on mutually friendly relationships with two big neighbors. The main pillars of Mongolia’s new international strategy were incorporated in Mongolia’s National Security Concept adopted on June 30, 1994. This document, approved by the Mongolian Parliament, emphasizes a balanced policy towards the country’s two giant neighbors, underlines the importance of economic security in protecting Mongolia’s national integrity, and warns about too much dependence on any one country for trade. In today’s world of globalization and interdependence, Mongolia has to engage with other countries beyond these two neighbors, Russia and China. This is fundamental thing of the Mongolia’s searching third neighbor. Mongolia needs more friends to ensure its national security interests and achieve economic prosperity its ‘Third Neighbor Policy’1 is a policy of extending its friends all around the world. Two immediate neighbors of Mongolia, Russia and China, remain the foreign policy priority and this priority is not contradictory to the policy of having more friends. Mongolia is becoming an arena of clashes of economic interests of developed countries, multinational corporations due its rich mining deposits. Mongolia's Third Neighbor Policy is aimed to leverage the influence of neighboring countries in the national security issues of Mongolia. In contrast with other satellite states of the former Soviet Union, Mongolia concurrently instituted a democratic political system, a market-driven economy, and a foreign policy based on balancing relations with Russia and China while expanding relations with the West and East. Mongolia is now pursuing a foreign policy that will facilitate global engagement, allow the nation to maintain its sovereignty, and provide diplomatic freedom of maneuver through a “third neighbor” policy. 2 This policy is very much alive today but there is no reason to claim that its implementation is satisfactory. Mongolia has major investors from the US, Japan, Germany and France from the EU, for example. There are many universal conventions related to landlocked country. For Mongolia, access to sea via our two neighbors, means promoting economic ties with the third neighbors, as an important factor conducive to reinforcing the material foundations of Mongolia’s third neighbor policy.

Highlights

  • As the scope of the third neighbor policy expanded, Mongolia became a member of the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 1997 and recognizes importance of establishing free trade agreement with its main trading partners, being part of regional trade agreements and participating multilateral trade negotiations having conducted within the framework of WTO by safeguarding of its national interests in order to create favorable condition for promoting foreign trade and to increase the access of local products to the international markets

  • The impact of foreign policy on the two geographic neighbors was that it articulated a new strategy to balance Mongolia’s relations with Russia and China that is known as the “third neighbor” policy

  • After twenty years of democracy, when Mongolia felt it necessary to review its regional security status and the “third neighbor” policy, it revised its existing foreign policy and in 2011 came out with a new Concept of Foreign Policy to guide the nation for its future foreign relations with Russia, China, and the other countries of the world

Read more

Summary

Introduction

It is landlocked country with huge territory, between two giant powers Russia and China. Km, with China to the south, east, and west. Km, frontier with Russia to the north and a 4,673 sq. It encompasses a territory of about 1,564,116 sq. In 1206, Genghis Khan founded the Mongol Empire, the largest empire in history. The Mongol Empire’s territory extended from present-day Poland in the west to the Korean peninsula in the east, from Siberia in the north to the Arab peninsula and Vietnam in the south, covering approximately 33 million square kilometers. In 1227, after Genghis Khan’s death, the Mongol Empire was subdivided into four kingdoms. In 1260, Genghis Khan’s grandson, Kublai Khan, ascended the

RS Global
Conclusions
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call