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Putin hails Soviet victory over Japan in courting Mongolia

Published 03/09/2014, 14:20
Updated 03/09/2014, 14:30
Putin hails Soviet victory over Japan in courting Mongolia

By Vladimir Soldatkin

ULAN BATOR (Reuters) - Russian President Vladimir Putin cited a 1939 Soviet victory over the Japanese army as a foundation of relations with Mongolia during a visit to Ulan Bator on Wednesday, despite a risk of upsetting Tokyo.

Putin's reference to the battles of Khalkhin Gol could be seen in Tokyo as a jibe following Japan's sanctions on Russia over the Ukraine crisis. Japan, locked in a territorial dispute with Russia over four Pacific islands, joined Western nations in imposing sanctions on Russia earlier this year.

"Today we are indeed marking together the 75th anniversary of one of the central events in our common history - the joint victory at Khalkhin Gol river," Putin said at the start of talks with Mongolian leader Tsakhia Elbegdorj.

"Historical memory, heroic events of the past, are by all means a good foundation to build Russian-Mongolian relations."

The victory in the Russian-Japanese conflict at Khalkhin Gol in Manchuria, a region occupied by Japan at the time and now part of Mongolia, helped fend off a possible Japanese invasion of Russia with Nazi Germany in 1941.

World War Two anniversary events were celebrated on a big scale across Russia this year as anti-Western sentiment grew over a pro-Russian separatist rebellion in eastern Ukraine.

Japan has joined the West in denouncing Russia's actions in Ukraine but the government of Shinzo Abe has trodden a fine line by imposing sanctions on a smaller scale than those sought by Washington. Tokyo hopes this will keep relations with Russia from going into a deep chill.

Moscow upset Tokyo by carrying out military exercises in the disputed Kurile island chain last month.

The dispute over the islands has strained relations between Japan and Russia since the end of World War Two, when Soviet forces occupied four islands at the southern end of the Kurile chain. The row has prevented the two countries signing a formal peace treaty.

(Writing by Alexei Anishchuk; editing by Ralph Boulton)

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