#Ukraine: Kissinger and dictators. Ivana Stradner @ivanastradner, advisor to @FDD Eastern Europe, cybersecurity, information operations, Russia's reflexive control, int'l law.

Jun 24, 2022, 12:35 AM

Photo:  Dictators — Khorloogiin Choibalsan (Mongolia, 1930s-1952)  After several meetings with Stalin, Choibalsan adopted the Soviet leader's policies and methods and applied them to Mongolia. He created a dictatorial system, suppressing the opposition and killing tens of thousands of people.
         Later in the 1930s, he "began to arrest and kill leading workers in the party, government, and various social organizations in addition to army officers, intellectuals, and other faithful workers," according to a report published in 1968 cited in the Historical Dictionary of Mongolia.
         In late 1951, Choibalsan went to Moscow to receive treatment for kidney cancer. He died the following year.


#Ukraine: Kissinger and dictators. Ivana Stradner @ivanastradner,  advisor to @FDD  Eastern Europe, cybersecurity, information operations, Russia's reflexive control, int'l law.