Mongolia finds a new friend: France


Briefly: French President Emmanuel Macron stopped in Mongolia on Sunday en route home from the G7 Summit in Japan. The visit was the first ever by a French president.

Mongolia isn’t just landlocked – it borders China in three directions, and Russia in the other. So it’s no surprise Mongolia sends 86% of its exports to China, while cooperating with Russia on a key new natural gas pipeline (to China).

But the world’s most sparsely populated nation (3 million folks in an area twice the size of Texas) is catching the eye of outside powers. It’s sitting on $1T to $3T worth of minerals, including elements like copper that are vital for the green transition.

And countries like France want in on that action. A French nuclear firm is already working to develop a uranium mine there, and Macron pitched a broader critical minerals supply deal while in town.

Intrigue’s take: One of the most intriguing moments was when Mongolian President Ukhnaagiin Khurelsukh called France his country’s “third neighbour”. Mongolia has had a third neighbour policy for decades as it’s tried to find new friends and reduce its reliance on China and Russia.

Sitting on such staggering wealth, Mongolia will have no shortage of willing ‘new neighbours’. The question is how its actual two neighbours (China and Russia) might respond.

Also worth noting:

  • Macron is the second European leader to visit Mongolia this year, afterthe first-ever visit by a Polish leader took place in April.
  • Macron’s was the first official visit by a French president, but President Chirac reportedly made a secret visit to Mongolia back in 1975. Relations date back as far as the 13th century, when the Mongol king wrote to the French king proposing they conquer Damascus together.
Latest Author Articles
Our 2026 geopolitics predictions

The ‘For-sures’ 1. Europe can’t shake the US While it’s easy to rag on Europe’s passive statements, consider the task European leaders have ahead: EU citizens shop with Visa or Mastercard, scroll on US-made devices from Google to Apple, watch viral shows on Netflix and HBO, and still even rely heavily on US military equipment. […]

19 January, 2026
Will recognition bring peace?

Canada has now joined France in announcing it’ll formally recognise a State of Palestine at the UN in September. And that’s just days after the UK flagged it’d do likewise unless Israel lets more aid in, signs a Hamas ceasefire, and halts expansions in the West Bank. So what’s going on? The legal definition of […]

31 July, 2025
Trump threatens 50% tariffs on Brazil. It won’t end well.

This article is a cross publication from The Brazilian Report.  After months of fear and anticipation, US President Donald Trump announced additional 50% tariffs on all Brazilian exports to the United States, to be enforced on Aug. 1. The letter to President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva of Brazil stood out among the batch Trump […]

15 July, 2025
Can the US actually destroy Iran’s Fordow base?

Now that the US president has indicated he’ll allow another two weeks for negotiations with Iran to continue, we can also reflect a little more on some of the underlying assumptions at play: eg, can the US actually punch through Iran’s Fordow mountain? So with thanks to an anonymous Intriguer, we connected with one of […]

20 June, 2025