At this point the US has very little influence there. It’s important to keep in mind that you can’t just do a regime change whenever you feel like it. The material and social conditions that facilitate regime change must be in place first. This is why the US relies so heavily on sanctions and NGOs to shape the country in a way that would allow installing a puppet regime. They attack the economy drive down the standard of living for the people, and then promote US friendly politics by funnelling billions to pro western media orgs. This sets the stage for eventual political capture.
At this point the US has very little influence there. It’s important to keep in mind that you can’t just do a regime change whenever you feel like it. The material and social conditions that facilitate regime change must be in place first. This is why the US relies so heavily on sanctions and NGOs to shape the country in a way that would allow installing a puppet regime. They attack the economy drive down the standard of living for the people, and then promote US friendly politics by funnelling billions to pro western media orgs. This sets the stage for eventual political capture.
is mongolia not already there?
Their economic situation is pretty stable. They’re a vital hub between Russia and China, so a lot trade goes through there along with resource development. https://www.worldbank.org/en/news/press-release/2025/05/23/world-bank-mining-and-agricultural-recovery-drive-mongolia-s-economic-growth