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Gongota Agreement of 1920

Russian Civil War
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51°46′18′′N 112°14′50′′E / 51.771643°N 112.247112°E / 51.771643; 112.247112

The Japanese troops occupying Blagoveshchensk
July 17, 1920 Gongota railway station, Yasutarou Takayanagi(Japanese: 高柳保太郎, right of center) of Japan and Vladimir Sergeevich Shatov(Russian: Владимир Сергеевич Шатов, left of center) of Far Eastern Republic.
Japanese Wikisource has original text related to this article:

The Gongota Agreement of 1920 (Russian: Гонготское соглашение, Japanese: 緩衝国建設覚書 (lit. Memorandum of establishing buffer state)) was a milestone in the Russian Civil War in Transbaikal. The Agreement was finalized at Gongota railway station on July 15, 1920 between the Far Eastern Republic's delegation headed by Alexander Krasnoshchyokov and Genrich Eiche and the Japanese Expeditionary Corps under Yui Mitsue. The Far Eastern Republic's demands were the evacuation of White Army troops from the zone held by the Japanese forces and the end of hostilities between the Soviets and Japan.[1] [2]

The process was not easy for the Far Eastern Republic authorities because the Japanese tried to postpone their evacuation from the region. Finally, the Japanese agreed stopping military actions against the FER troops and partisans. A no man's line was created west of Chita and it helped the Far Eastern Republic launch the final operation of taking Chita.

References

[edit ]
  1. ^ "ГОНГОТСКОЕ СОГЛАШЕНИЕ". Encyclopedia of Transbaikalia. Retrieved 10 March 2025.
  2. ^ "Siberia and the Japanese Army: Facts Bearing on the Charge That Japan's Motive Is Imperialism Rather Than Self-Defense". Current History (1916-1940). 12 (6): 983–986. 1920. ISSN 2641-080X . Retrieved 10 March 2025.
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