Myers Thanks Mongolians for Iraqi Freedom Help
By Jim Garamone http://www.defenselink.mil
American Forces Press Service
ULAN BATOR, Mongolia, Jan. 13, 2004 - Mongolia is a small country with a powerful
warrior tradition. But today, the country consciously is tying its reputation
to peacekeeping, and Mongolia's latest area of operations is Iraq.
Air Force Gen. Richard B. Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, visited
Mongolia today to speak with national and defense leaders and to meet with soldiers
who are getting ready to go to Iraq. He thanked the Mongolian leaders for their
support in Operation Iraqi Freedom, and he said the Mongolian people "should
be very proud of the professionalism and discipline of their forces in Iraq."
The last time Mongolian soldiers were in Iraq was in 1258. They destroyed Baghdad
then. Now, the Mongolian military has 173 soldiers of the 150th Elite Peacekeeping
Battalion in Hillah, Iraq. All reports, said Myers, are that the unit is doing
an excellent job as part of the Multinational Division Central- South. The division
is commanded by a Polish general and contains troops from a number of different
nationalities. Myers said the Mongolian unit's members have proven themselves
as infantrymen, as convoy escorts, as engineers and in providing medical assistance
to the Iraqi people.
Mongolia is a large country geographically; it is about the size of Alaska. But
it's small in population, with about 2.5 million people. The country is located
between Russia and China, and until 1991 had close relations with the Soviet Union.
Modern Mongolia dates to just after World War I.
The Mongolian military was a typical Soviet formation. Weapons and equipment are
1960s- and 1970s-vintage and Soviet-made. The Mongolian army still drives tanks
and infantry vehicles from that era.
U.S. officials said the army numbers about 45,000, and most of it still is configured
in the old Soviet style. Missions like that of the 150th Elite Peacekeeping Battalion
are what the Mongolians want to move toward, said Col. L. Noov, a Mongolian army
general staff member, in an interview. The colonel said the units now follow the
Soviet army and division system. The Mongolians will move toward brigades and
battalions. The units will become lighter, with fewer tanks and faster, more survivable
transportation, the colonel said.
Many Mongolian army commissioned and noncommissioned officers attend military
schools in other countries. One staff officer, for example, graduated from the
Army's Command and Staff College at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. An NCO in the 150th
proudly wears his U.S. Army Ranger Tab on his Mongolian army uniform.
Mongolia is not a rich country. The average person earns about $400 per year.
Myers' Mongolian counterpart, Maj. Gen. T. Togoo, said the soldiers have learned
lessons in Iraq, and that the second group of soldiers to go later this month
will benefit from that. The general said the soldiers need new equipment and some
new training, and that changes are being made in the uniforms the troops wear.
Mongolia has personnel with the United Nations missions in the western Sahara
and in the Congo, as well as a 15-man team working with the Afghan National Army
to repair old Soviet artillery. The Mongolians are training the Afghan soldiers
to use the weapon.
Maj. Gen. M. Borbaatar, deputy chief of the Mongolian army general staff, said
the Mongolians are developing an area called Five Hills north of the capital to
train peacekeepers. He said U.S. Marines conducted training there with the Mongolians
and were impressed by the area and the various terrains. He said the Marines taught
the Mongolians some peacekeeping techniques, and the Mongolians taught the Marines
long-range, horse-mounted patrols. He said the Marines "would have been better
if they stayed longer."
All the Mongolian leaders clearly were delighted to meet with Myers, and they
said there is a lot of support for the peacekeeping mission from the Mongolian
people.
The Mongolians will consult with the United States in transforming its military,
Borbaatar said. The next big step is developing an NCO corps for the military.
He said the NCOs are what make the American military the best in the world, and
the Mongolians will take a page from that book.
Myers thanked the Mongolians for their hospitality and their help. He left Ulan
Bator and flew to Beijing, where he will hold a series of meetings with Chinese
Defense leaders. Top