For three days, the capital of Mongolia, Ulaanbaatar, was shaken by riots.

The night before, already in the dark, the situation calmed down a little after the participants of the rally near the Government House, having conveyed some “demands”, voluntarily left the square themselves.

Well, as voluntarily - after the order of the capital's mayor Dolgorsurengiin Sumyaabazar on forceful dispersal.

The decisiveness of the city authorities was reinforced by the position of the Khural, the Mongolian parliament, which considered the government's proposal to introduce a "red" level of emergency.

It definitely smelled like fried food.

There were more than enough grounds for a tough and solidary reaction from the authorities.

The protesters did not limit themselves to the siege of the government building, but took it by storm.

Video frames in which the raging youth, shouting and whistling, burst, triumphant, into a building as monumental as the American Capitol, spread around the world.

The stone batyrs, mounted on horseback and armed on either side of the main entrance, did not save either.

In the era of social networks, the scene of the "storming of the Winter Palace" on the air turns into a ready-made agitation - it calls the Mongols to join.

The formal reason for the protest is corruption.

Due to the illegal sale of millions of tons of coal to China, the Mongolian treasury lost $1.8 billion over the years. According to media reports, high-ranking officials and even parliamentarians were involved in the scheme.

For Mongolia, coal is the main export commodity, a source of currency in a country that mainly lives off domestic resources.

The actual theft of folk remedies, of course, cannot but revolt.

Moreover, the facts were confirmed - in China, participants in illegal enrichment were tried and already shot.

But aren't the coal affairs just a pretext for some kind of political process?

For example, launching a change of power in Mongolia?

This is just a guess, an assumption, but the facts are such that this cannot be ruled out.

Now the Mongolian People's Party is in power in the country.

In opposition to it is the Democratic Party of Mongolia.

And this is the case when the names of the parties correctly indicate their orientation.

If the businessmen associated with the former conduct business mainly within the country, and are externally connected with China, then the latter are guided by the United States and Japan, experts say.

Washington has a direct interest in wobbling power in Mongolia.

Having challenged Moscow and Beijing, the Americans are trying wherever they can to weaken their opponents.

Russian-Chinese energy cooperation is like a bone in their throat, as it makes senseless a possible naval blockade of China (for example, because of Taiwan), and gives Russia a new market instead of the European one.

The Russian Soyuz Vostok gas pipeline and, possibly, the Power of Siberia-2 oil pipeline will pass through Mongolia.

It is also considered promising to transport coal from deposits in Tuva through Mongolia to China.

By rebooting the Mongolian government through the Maidan, having staked on the local democrats, the United States may try to drive a wedge, divide the two superpowers, just as they destroyed the Russia-Europe tie by unleashing a war in Ukraine.

Not in vain, after all, in the post-Soviet period, thousands of young Mongols were trained in the United States and other Western countries, forming agents of influence.

And now they are ready to allocate millions of dollars to Mongolia to support anti-Russian sanctions.

Not necessarily they will succeed, but the adversary is strong because he does not hesitate to try.

Sometimes he succeeds.

And even Europe, Europe omitted by Washington, continues to follow the lead of the hegemon, financing the projects it needs from its own budget.

Thus, the European Commission intends to allocate €2 million to “support” civil society organizations in Mongolia.

It is supposed to work with young people to promote their active participation "in decision-making processes at all levels."

Simply put, take politicized and not very young people for a salary.

And then they, at the signal of who should go to storm the government ...

This is what happens when new generations depart from the precepts of their ancestors.

Is this bequeathed to the Mongolian youth by their great ancestor Genghis Khan?.. On the contrary, he prescribed obedience to his khan.

And the punishment for disobedience is death.

If now this wise code was the law of the Mongols, several hundred who broke into the government building should have been captured and executed by a cruel execution known among the Mongols, when the heels of the guilty were pressed against his head, breaking his back.

The dry crackle of the vertebrae would have stood over Ulaanbaatar.

Horror.

Fortunately for the pro-American rebels, those terrible times are long gone.

Now, for an unsuccessful attempt to overthrow the government in Mongolia, they are not even punished.

Including because of self-confidence.

Indeed, what is there to fear from the ruling People's Party (based on the people!) with such powerful and respectful neighbors as China and Russia?

By the way, the security of the Russian embassy during the riots was promptly strengthened, and the border crossing near the town of Kyakhta on the Russian-Mongolian border in Buryatia continues to operate normally.

Moscow has a direct interest in political calm in Mongolia.

Times are tough.

The global confrontation between the USA and Europe to the entire non-Western world is designed to trample down all those who did not obey them into the Stone Age.

Russia and China are at the forefront of resistance.

In Ukraine and everywhere.

Who knows, maybe soon, as in the Great Patriotic War, from the Mongolian rear, we will again begin to receive a sort of eastern lend-lease: short fur coats, stew, so necessary for our soldiers in the ice trenches of Donbass?

But for this it is necessary to strangle the "Maidan" in Ulaanbaatar.

The point of view of the author may not coincide with the position of the editors.