Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
09ULAANBAATAR329
2009-11-13 10:43:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Ulaanbaatar
Cable title:  

SELECTION OF NEW MONGOLIAN FOREIGN MINISTER

Tags:  PGOV PREL MG 
pdf how-to read a cable
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P 131043Z NOV 09
FM AMEMBASSY ULAANBAATAR
TO SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 3111
INFO NSC WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
SECDEF WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
AMEMBASSY BEIJING 
AMEMBASSY MOSCOW 
AMEMBASSY SEOUL 
AMEMBASSY TOKYO
C O N F I D E N T I A L ULAANBAATAR 000329 


STATE FOR EAP/CM

E.O. 12958: DECL: 11/13/2034
TAGS: PGOV PREL MG
SUBJECT: SELECTION OF NEW MONGOLIAN FOREIGN MINISTER
HIGHLIGHTS ASSERTIVE YOUNG RULING PARTY WING

REF: A. ULAANBAATAR 308

B. ULAANBAATAR 293


Classified By: Political Section Chief Andrew Covington,
Reasons 1.4 (b) and (d)

C O N F I D E N T I A L ULAANBAATAR 000329


STATE FOR EAP/CM

E.O. 12958: DECL: 11/13/2034
TAGS: PGOV PREL MG
SUBJECT: SELECTION OF NEW MONGOLIAN FOREIGN MINISTER
HIGHLIGHTS ASSERTIVE YOUNG RULING PARTY WING

REF: A. ULAANBAATAR 308

B. ULAANBAATAR 293


Classified By: Political Section Chief Andrew Covington,
Reasons 1.4 (b) and (d)


1. (C) Summary: On November 12, Parliament approved the
nomination of G. Zandanshatar as foreign minister. The new
foreign minister represents an assertive young wing of the
Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party (MPRP) intent on
having its turn at the helm. The leading candidates over
which Zandanshatar triumphed were established members of the
MPRP already in significant positions of power, whereas
Zandanshatar was merely an MP with a minor committee
chairmanship. His selection reflects the waning power of
former Prime Minister Bayar, who is back is Seoul for medical
treatment. End Summary.


2. (C) On November 12, Parliament easily approved the
nomination of G. Zandanshatar as the new foreign minister of
Mongolia. Zandanshatar's selection comes more than two weeks
after the resignation of former Prime Minister Bayar for
health reasons resulted in the elevation of then-Foreign
Minister Batbold to the PM position (reftel A). This
relatively long period indicates Batbold has had more
difficulty determining the composition of his cabinet than
had been the case for his predecessor. Bayar's strength
stemmed not from loyal blocks within his party, but rather
from his forceful character, which was largely responsible
for establishing a coalition with the Democratic Party in
fall 2008 and for the passing of the Oyu Tolgoi Investment
Agreement (reftel B) in October this year. Batbold, who is
seen as a good compromise candidate as PM, has not shown the
same forcefulness but may yet rise to the occasion.

--------------
THE FIELD
--------------


3. (C) During these two weeks, several candidates from Bayar
and Batbold's party, the MPRP, emerged to seek the FM slot.
At the same time, the MPRP entreated the Democratic Party
(DP) to obtain the DP's coveted Finance Ministry seat.
Despite an internal MPRP vote in favor of seeking the Finance
slot, the DP refused to surrender such a plum position.


4. (C) Batbold emerged as the incoming PM in the last week of
October, immediately after Bayar announced that he was
stepping down. Bayar had the advantage of knowing his own

plans, and as such began to position Batbold as his heir
weeks in advance. On November 2, Batbold began to push for a
new FM in earnest. Even at this early stage, it was clear
that that two parties sought to maintain the coalition in its
present form. On the same day, Batbold requested that
Parliament retain the same ministries and cabinet positions
as Bayar's government, with no shifting of titles or
responsibilities among ministries. This request did not
detail if the 9-to-6 MPRP-to-DP distribution of cabinet seats
would remain or even who might occupy those seats, but the
lack of shifting indicated little change would occur.


5. (C) On November 2, two names topped the FM candidacy list:
Deputy Speaker N. Enkhbold and MP G. Zandanshatar.
Long-serving MP N. Enkhbold represents an established and
experienced wing of the party, while Zandanshatar, at age 39
and with the DPRK parliamentary group chairmanship his most
senior responsibility, stands for a young, highly ambitious
wing of the MPRP seeking its turn at the helm. Observers and
even contacts within the MPRP at that point considered N.
Enkhbold to have the edge due to his experience and
reputation, which is why Enkhbold's name came up as part of
an MPRP offer to the DP to have Finance Minister Bayartsogt
(DP) move to the Foreign Ministry and allow N. Enkhbold to
take over Finance. As noted, the DP did not bite, instead
telling the MPRP to fill the FM slot with an MPRP candidate,
full stop.


6. (C) Once the DP's position on the Finance Ministry became
clear (despite a few half-hearted MPRP approaches in the days
that followed),the FM debate shifted back to N. Enkhbold and

G. Zandanshatar. The fact that Enkhbold was not elevated
quickly into the FM position meant that Bayar's persuasive
power was much reduced (he is now in Seoul again for medical
treatment) despite his continued role as an MP and as
Chairman of the MPRP, and that Zandanshatar's faction within
the MPRP was stronger than his internal party opposition had
reckoned. Zandanshatar is closely aligned with a group of
similarly young, ambitious, and aggressive politicians
centered around Khurelsukh, Secretary General of the MPRP.

--------------
A COMPROMISE CANDIDATE EMERGES...
--------------


7. (C) As of November 4, neither candidate had emerged
victorious from the internal party wrangling, which became
increasingly heated. That day, a compromise candidate
emerged: R. Bold, head of the General Intelligence Agency
(GIA) and former Ambassador to the United States (not to be
confused with Defense Minister Lu. Bold). For some 24 hours,
Bold appeared to be the frontrunner, likely because MPRP
moderates wanted the dispute to end quickly. Although N.
Enkhbold may have been satisfied with this option given his
already powerful position as Deputy Speaker, Zandanshatar's
faction reasserted itself, which kept N. Enkhbold in the
fight.

--------------
...AND DISAPPEARS
--------------


8. (C) R. Bold, sensing the morass the party would be in by
expanding this to a three-way fight, pulled his name from
consideration on November 5. Bold's reasons for pulling out
also include his concern that the DP will soon succeed in
inserting one of their own as deputy at the GIA, now that
Elbegdorj is president and head of the National Security
Council. Furthermore, as GIA Director, R. Bold already has
ministerial rank.


9. (C) After Bold's retreat, the Enkhbold-Zandanshatar
dispute reignited and continued over the weekend of November
7 and 8. On Tuesday, November 10, with speculation growing
as to why Batbold had not yet put an FM in place,
Zandanshatar's name was suddenly on everyone's lips. At an
NDI event on November 10, former FM Erdenechuluun (MPRP)
asked MFAT Americas Department Director Odonjil who the FM
would be, to which Odonjil replied it would be Zandanshatar.
Erdenechuluun was surprised. On the same day, Presidential
Foreign Policy Advisor Purevsuren called the Charge's office
and poloff's cell to indicate Zandanshatar was the one.


10. (C) Zandanshatar's sudden victory was the result of
another MPRP caucus meeting that selected Zandanshatar for
the FM slot. With the MPRP in control of Parliament and the
DP uninterested in interfering in the FM decision at the risk
of its Finance slot, the MPRP's decision guaranteed the FM
job to Zandanshatar. How the tie was broken is not yet
clear, but N. Enkhbold, with his Deputy Speaker title, had
less to lose, and PM Batbold had everything to gain by ending
an intra-party conflict that threatened to portray him as
ineffectual and which would expose MPRP internecine strife to
wide-scale public scrutiny. (Note: During the November 10
conversation between Odonjil and Erdenechuluun, both agreed
that N. Enkhbold had little to be upset about because the
Deputy Speaker position was far more desirable, given
Parliament's status as the most powerful branch of
government. End Note.)

--------------
ONE MINOR PORTFOLIO CHANGE
--------------


11. (SBU) One other ministerial position also changed: The
Chair of the Cabinet Secretariat (similar to a Chief of Staff
position) has shifted from Ms. Dolgor, whose popularity had
been waning in recent months, to MP Ch. Khurelbaatar, Chair
of the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Budget. Both are
MPRP, keeping the MPRP-to-DP ratio intact. Khurelbaatar
recently returned from a weeklong parliamentary exchange in
Washington through the House Democracy Partnership. He has
since told poloffs he is looking forward to implementing
budget and legislative reform ideas stemming from his visit
to Washington

--------------
COALITION STABLE
--------------


12. (SBU) What was clear throughout this period is that the
MPRP and the DP were both determined to maintain the
coalition government more or less in the format Bayar had
established. Despite discussions on trading the Finance seat
for the Foreign Ministry and perhaps also the Chief of Staff
positions, neither party was willing to let the coalition
collapse.


13. (SBU) In the MPRP's case, with the election of Elbegdorj
as president in May 2009, the DP now has veto power over the
MPRP, which, does not have sufficient MPs to override a
presidential veto, despite its comfortable majority. (Of 76
seats, the MPRP has 46, with 39 being the absolute majority
threshold and 51 being the two-thirds required to override.)


14. (SBU) As for the DP, the majority of the party supports
staying in the coalition over retreating to the role of
opposition party in Parliament, despite the weight of
Elbegdorj's veto. Elbegdorj, who initially resisted a
coalition with the MPRP last fall when he was an MP and the
DP chairman, has also voiced support in recent weeks for
maintaining the coalition.

--------------
COMMENT
--------------


15. (C) The MPRP is far from monolithic, as the past two
weeks of wrangling illustrate. Bayar, despite his continued
leadership of the party, had the inertia to install only
Batbold. This inertia was insufficient to get his childhood
friend, R. Bold, installed as foreign minister. The
selection of Zandanshatar, who has little in common with
Bayar, is an indicator that the MPRP is beginning the process
of yielding power to the younger generation. This younger
generation is split between a brash and aggressive wing
represented by Zandanshatar and Khurelsukh, and an apparently
smoother but no less ambitious wing represented by Minerals
and Energy Minister and recently elected MP Zorigt.


16. (C) Zandanshatar carries baggage that may allow enemies
within his party to replace him relatively easily in the
future. He, Khurelsukh, and another MPRP member were
implicated in a gambling scandal involving embezzlement of
USD 11 million from a formally state-owned bank and other
misuses of state property from 2005 to 2007. Consequently,
few in the public believe him to have clean hands. Others
who have worked with Zandanshatar report him to be malleable
and having the tendency not to follow through on projects and
commitments. Moreover, many Mongolians were surprised to
hear Zandanshatar will be the new FM, since he has a
reputation as a poor manager and does not have extensive
foreign policy credentials. In conversations in 2007 with a
previous poloff, Zandanshatar noted his interest in changing
the MPRP's name, ideology and party program. More than two
years on, little of this ambitious program has entered the
MPRP's discussions or Zandanshatar's public statements and
legislative record. END COMMENT


HILL