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Jonathan S. Addleton - Mongolia and the United States

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Jonathan S. Addleton Mongolia and the United States
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Mongolia and the United States provides a pioneering firsthand look at the - photo 1

Mongolia and the United States provides a pioneering firsthand look at the remarkable growth in ties between two countries separated by vast distances that yet share a growing list of interests and values.

While maintaining positive ties with its two powerful neighbors, China and Russia, Mongolia has sought third neighbors to help provide balance. For its part, the United States responded by supporting Mongolia as an emerging democracy while strengthening development and commercial relations. People-to-people ties have also expanded, as has a security partnership that supports Mongolias emergence as a provider of military peacekeepers in Afghanistan, Kosovo, Darfur, and elsewhere. A magnet for foreign investment, Mongolia is one of the worlds fastest-growing economies. Against this backdrop, partnerships developed between the United States and Mongolia since 1987 reflect the variety of ways in which diplomatic engagement can help set the stage for more dramatic and far-reaching changes.

The author, Jonathan S. Addleton, participated in a number of these developments, first as USAID country director (200104) and later as US ambassador (200912). The narrative provides personal insights and is based on material that would otherwise be unavailable.

Jonathan S. Addleton served as a US Foreign Service officer in Mongolia twice, first as USAID mission director (200104) and then as ambassador (200912). Other assignments include development counselor at the US Mission to the European Union in Brussels; USAID mission director in Pakistan and Cambodia; and USAID program officer in Jordan, Kazakhstan, South Africa, and Yemen. He has written a number of articles on Asia as well as two previous books, Undermining the Center (Oxford University Press, 1992) and Some Far and Distant Place (University of Georgia Press, 1997). In 2012, he was awarded the Polar Star, Mongolias highest civilian honor for foreign citizens, for his role in strengthening ties between the United States and Mongolia.

Long before they had diplomatic relations, Mongolia and the United States influenced one another in unusual and unrecognized ways. Now Jonathan Addletons inside look at the diplomatic relations between the two countries carries lessons for anyone wishing to learn from the past as a guide to future relations between the great powers of Asia and America.

Jack Weatherford, author of Genghis Khan and the Making of the Modern World

Ambassador Addleton admirably documents contemporary Mongolian relations, together with early contacts in the 1860s and exotic adventures in the twentieth century. His timely, highly readable record of bilateral engagement since 1987 highlights the development of Mongolian democracy and the entwined interests of our two countries.

Alphonse F. La Porta, US Ambassador to Mongolia, 19972000

Hearty thanks to Jonathan Addleton for this lively and illuminating account of the US-Mongolian relationships rapid multidimensional development and major contribution to the historical transformation of this remote and fascinating country.

Richard Williams, First US Ambassador to Mongolia

Mongolia and the United States is must reading for professional diplomats and business people preparing to work in Ulaanbaatar. Well organized and authoritative, Ambassador Addletons book will be welcomed by libraries and academic researchers seeking a work that puts all the data on US-Mongolia relations in one place. Lively descriptions of past history lead up to informative treatments of contemporary USAID measures to reform the Mongolian banking system, security cooperation between our military establishments, and Peace Corps people-to-people relationships. A valuable contribution to the literature on a strategic Asian country.

Nicholas Platt, President Emeritus, Asia Society

This in-depth study, which also includes personal observations by six of Addletons seven predecessors, goes beyond the tradition of diplomatic memoirs in that it is a well-researched and detailed, but eminently readable, review of American impact on Mongolias rapidly modernizing nomadic society. It will be the inspiration for further analysis of the postCold War American policies of democratic nationbuilding, free market promotion, and people-to-people contact in a country whose mineral-rich economy is emerging as a leader in Northeast Asia.

Alicia Campi, author of The Impact of China and Russia on United StatesMongolian Political Relations in the Twentieth Century

Mongolia and the United States

ADST-DACOR Diplomats and Diplomacy Series Series Editor Margery Boichel - photo 2

ADST-DACOR Diplomats and Diplomacy Series

Series Editor: Margery Boichel Thompson

Since 1776, extraordinary men and women have represented the United States abroad under widely varying circumstances. What they did and how and why they did it remain little known to their compatriots. In 1995, the Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training (ADST) and DACOR, an organization of foreign affairs professionals, created the Diplomats and Diplomacy book series to increase public knowledge and appreciation of the professionalism of American diplomats and their involvement in world history. Ambassador Jonathan Addletons examination of 25 years of United StatesMongolia diplomatic relations, the 52nd volume in the series, combines history with close-up perspectives on developing ties with an emerging Asian democracy.

Related Titles in the Series

Charles T. Cross, Born a Foreigner: A Memoir of the American Presence in Asia

Hermann Frederick Eilts, Early American Diplomacy in the Near and Far East: The Diplomatic and Personal History of Edmund Q. Roberts (17841836)

John H. Holdridge, Crossing the Divide: An Insiders Account of Normalization of U.S.-China Relations

Dennis Kux, The United States and Pakistan, 19472000: Disenchanted Allies

Terry McNamara, Escape with Honor: My Last Hours in Vietnam

William B. Milam, Bangladesh and Pakistan: Flirting with Failure in Muslim South Asia

Robert H. Miller, Vietnam and Beyond: A Diplomats Cold War Education

William Michael Morganm, Pacific Gibraltar: U.S.-Japanese Rivalry over the Annexation of Hawaii, 18851898

Ronald Neumann, The Other War: Winning and Losing in Afghanistan

David D. Newsom, Witness to a Changing World

Nicholas Platt, China Boys: How U.S. Relations with the PRC Began and Grew

Howard B. Schaffer, The Limits of Influence: Americas Role in Kashmir

Ulrich Straus, The Anguish of Surrender: Japanese POWs of World War II

Nancy Bernkopf Tucker, ed., China Confidential: American Diplomats and Sino-American Relations, 19451996

Mongolia and the United States

A Diplomatic History

Jonathan S. Addleton

An ADST-DACOR Diplomats and Diplomacy Book

Hong Kong University Press The University of Hong Kong Pokfulam Road Hong Kong - photo 3

Hong Kong University Press

The University of Hong Kong

Pokfulam Road

Hong Kong

www.hkupress.org

Jonathan S. Addleton 2013

The views and opinions in this book are solely those of the author and not necessarily those of the Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training, DACOR, or the Government of the United States.

ISBN 978-988-8139-94-1 (Hardback)

ISBN 978-988-8180-88-2

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