AHC Genghis Khan II Conquers Tibet

If you know don't know the story of Roman Von Ungern Sternberg....what the hell have you been doing with your life? Learn about him. I and a lot of the Kaiserreich community call him Genghis Khan II

Anyways, after he conquered Mongolia, Lenin saw he was the only threat to the Soviets now, and they invaded Mongolia. He (like the god he is) fought Soviet trucks, and planes with him, and his hundreds of private soldiers on horseback.

After that, his loyal followers needed to escape. The Majority wanted to continue fighting with Admiral Semyonov, and the Japanese. But Roman Von Ungern Sternberg thought of something else. He wanted to go through the Gobi Desert, make it to Tibet, and then conquer it.

Even his diehard supporters who thought of him as a god left him because he was crazy. Some stuck with him, but he was captured by Soviets and then executed.

But what if The Majority of his followers agreed to stick along, promising them fame, and riches in Tibet. They decide to head out to get to Tibet.

Could they make it to Tibet, and Conquer Tibet? And if they do, what happens afterward?

P.S I'll be making a lot of threads on Roman Von Ungern Sternberg.
 
If you know don't know the story of Roman Von Ungern Sternberg....what the hell have you been doing with your life? Learn about him. I and a lot of the Kaiserreich community call him Genghis Khan II

Anyways, after he conquered Mongolia, Lenin saw he was the only threat to the Soviets now, and they invaded Mongolia. He (like the god he is) fought Soviet trucks, and planes with him, and his hundreds of private soldiers on horseback.

After that, his loyal followers needed to escape. The Majority wanted to continue fighting with Admiral Semyonov, and the Japanese. But Roman Von Ungern Sternberg thought of something else. He wanted to go through the Gobi Desert, make it to Tibet, and then conquer it.

Even his diehard supporters who thought of him as a god left him because he was crazy. Some stuck with him, but he was captured by Soviets and then executed.

But what if The Majority of his followers agreed to stick along, promising them fame, and riches in Tibet. They decide to head out to get to Tibet.

Could they make it to Tibet, and Conquer Tibet? And if they do, what happens afterward?

P.S I'll be making a lot of threads on Roman Von Ungern Sternberg.
Problem is, we got image about Ungern that was created by western amateur historians that is wrong.
He never stated he was Genghis Khan reborn or God of War, and he always claimed to be simple Christian.
He never wanted to conquer Tibet but to escape there and offer his army and him to service of Dalai Lama, same thing what he did in Mongolia.
He never aspired to be dictator, but one who will restore medieval era but rulers would be always monarchs.
 
Problem is, we got image about Ungern that was created by western amateur historians that is wrong.
He never stated he was Genghis Khan reborn or God of War, and he always claimed to be simple Christian.
He never wanted to conquer Tibet but to escape there and offer his army and him to service of Dalai Lama, same thing what he did in Mongolia.
He never aspired to be dictator, but one who will restore medieval era but rulers would be always monarchs.

I didn't see many sources on him, but a lot could have been glorified.

I did think through a lot of Mongolians thought he would restore the Mongol empire, and become Genghis Khan II, and the Dalai Lama favored him as the God of war reborn.
I also thought he was a Buddhist, and a Protestant at the same time.

Then in this timeline could he make it to Tibet with his followers?

Are there other credible sources you know that I could look into?

(I really like him)
 
I got my information from Roman Von Ungern Sternberg by these 3 sources. (I don't know if they are accurate or not, so if they aren't please let me know)

 
I didn't see many sources on him, but a lot could have been glorified.

I did think through a lot of Mongolians thought he would restore the Mongol empire, and become Genghis Khan II, and the Dalai Lama favored him as the God of war reborn.
I also thought he was a Buddhist, and a Protestant at the same time.

Then in this timeline could he make it to Tibet with his followers?

Are there other credible sources you know that I could look into?

(I really like him)
He liked some aspects of Buddhism but never enough to go full Buddha, mist of myths about him come from cheap so-called book '' Bloody White Baron'' that is seen as copypasta of soviet propaganda about him.
Best sources would be Russian sources like Baron's Cloak or Autocrat of the Desert.
 
He liked some aspects of Buddhism but never enough to go full Buddha, mist of myths about him come from cheap so-called book '' Bloody White Baron'' that is seen as copypasta of soviet propaganda about him.
Best sources would be Russian sources like Baron's Cloak or Autocrat of the Desert.

I saw he practiced Military Buddhism, and was a devout Christian, but also Buddhist.

I'll probably buy the Baron's cloak so I can learn more about him, is there anything wrong with the 3 videos I watched?
 
I got my information from Roman Von Ungern Sternberg by these 3 sources. (I don't know if they are accurate or not, so if they aren't please let me know)

All three of them are very biased and based on book Bloody White Baron, that was written more to be sensational then truthful.
 
Could you tell me some of the inaccuracies in them?

(If you have enough time, and if you want)
1-Whole accusations of being sadistic as a kid is probably false, sadists are by definition cowards and Ungern was not.
2-Most of his killings of civilians is grossly blown out of proportions.
3-They forget to mention him restoring traditional buddhist schools for children, creating infrastructure, paper money and public transport.
4-They imply he really belived he was Genghis Khan reborn but that is historical mistake, he never saw himself aa God, or Genghis Khan. He was actually very ascetic and humble, not some egoistic dictator.
 
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