Mongolian-Russian Conferences 1912–1915 As under previous governments, Tserendorj's primary goal was to secure broader international recognition of Mongolia's independence. In October 1912, Tserendorj was one of three men appointed to write a final draft for a Russo-Mongolian Friendship Agreement, signed in
Urga on October 21, 1912. In exchange for Russia helping Mongolia maintain its independence, Mongolia agreed to give special privileges to Russian civilians and trade, and to consult Russia before concluding agreements with other countries. In January 1913, Tserendorj was part of the "Mongolian Embassy" delegation (consisting of Minister of Foreign Affairs Van
Khanddorj, the Deputy Prime Minister Beis Shirnendamdin, Deputy Minister Tserendorj, and Secretary Bavuudorj from the Foreign Ministry) sent to Russia by the Bogd Khaganate to negotiate the establishment of a Mongolian embassy in
St. Petersburg (which Russia refused), the purchase of weapons and military training, and the issuing of a reproval by Russia to the Chinese government to end hostilities towards Mongolia. On January 24, 1913,
Tsar Nicholas II received the delegation at
Tsarskoye Selo Palace, with the Imperial Russian government awarding honors to the delegates. Tserendorj was awarded the
Order of Saint Stanislaus (2nd class). From 1914 to 1915, Tserendorj accompanied Prime Minister
Tögs-Ochiryn Namnansüren as part of the Mongolian delegation to the 8-month long
Kyakhta treaty conference between
Czarist Russia and the
Republic of China that sought to clarify, among other things, the Russian-Chinese border in East Asia and Mongolia's geopolitical status. Ultimately, Mongolian hopes for international recognition of its independence were dashed when Russia and China agreed that Mongolia was an autonomous region within China. Although the agreement failed to secure Moscow's firm recognition of Mongolia's independence from Chinese rule, Moscow did, however, recognize the Mongolian People's government as "the sole legitimate government" of the Mongolian people.
Chinese occupation Tserendorj maintained his position as Minister of Foreign Affairs after the
occupation of Niislel Khüree (present day
Ulaanbaatar) by troops under the Chinese warlord
Xu Shuzheng in late 1919. Xu installed a dictatorial regime, imprisoned leaders of Mongolia's independence movement such as
Khatanbaatar Magsarjav and
Manlaibaatar Damdinsüren, and placed the
Bogd Khan under house arrest. In the face of Chinese threats to exile the Bogd Khan, Tserendorj, Prime Minister
Gonchigjalzangiin Badamdorj and the Bogd Khan acquiesced and signed a document "voluntarily" abdicating Mongolia's autonomy to Chinese rule. Although Badamdorj's career and reputation suffered irreparable damage as a result of his caving to Chinese pressure, Tserendorj escaped blame despite reports from the first American Consul in
Kalgan, Samuel Sokobin, that Tserendorj had opted for reconciliation with the Chinese if negotiations could not produce independence.
Restoration of the Mongolian Government by Baron Ungern Tserendorj continued to work within the government even after forces commanded by "The Mad Baron"
Roman von Ungern-Sternberg ejected a Chinese occupation in February 1921. Ungern, an anti-Bolshevik warlord whose forces invaded Mongolia during the
Russian Civil War, entered Mongolia in late 1920 with the intent of freeing the Bogd Khan from Chinese domination and establishing a new Mongolian Empire. Tserendorj made up part of his short-lived puppet government that lasted until July 11, 1921 when Mongolian partisans (commanded by
Damdin Sükhbaatar) and Red Army units defeated Ungern's forces and recaptured the Mongolian capital. Tserendorj was named Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs in the newly proclaimed
revolutionary government headed by Prime Minister
Dogsomyn Bodoo.
1921 Treaty with the Soviet Union Following the Russian
October Revolution of 1917, and the declaration of the
Mongolian People's Republic in 1921, the Kyakhta Treaty became moot. In 1921, a group of high-ranking Mongolians that included
Damdin Sükhbaatar and Tserendorj traveled to the
Soviet Union to initiate Soviet-Mongolia friendship talks. There they both allegedly met with
Vladimir Lenin. The resulting Friendship Treaty (signed November 5, 1921) formally established relations between the two countries and the exchange of Ambassadors. News articles from 1921 show Tserendorj "photographed in Moscow while signing a pact with the Russian Soviet Government opening diplomatic relations between the new revolutionary republic of Mongolia and Russia, Tsiben Dargi headed the Mongolian delegation."; ==International reputation==