By Cheryl Pellerin
American Forces Press Service
ULAANBAATAR, Mongolia, April 11, 2014 – Defense Secretary
Chuck Hagel and Defense Minister Dashdemberel Bat-Erdene signed a joint vision
statement here yesterday designed to deepen a decade-long defense relationship
built on shared interests and forged in combat as troops of both nations fought
together in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Mongolia was the final stop of a 10-day Asia-Pacific trip --
Hagel’s fourth in less than 12 months -- that began in Hawaii with a meeting of
defense ministers of the 10 member states of the Association of Southeast Asian
Nations, or ASEAN, and continued in Japan, China and Mongolia.
When Hagel arrived at Ulaanbaatar’s Chinggis Khaan
International Airport, among the U.S. Embassy and Mongolian Ministry of Defense
officials there to greet him was a woman dressed in a traditional Mongolian
garment -- one similar to Mongolian bridal designs used as the basis for
costumes worn by Queen Padme Amidala in “Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom
Menace,” according to embassy officials.
On the ground, Hagel was presented with traditional
welcoming gifts: a blue silk scarf and a silver bowl containing a Mongolian
dairy product called aaruul, a dried fermented milk curd.
At the Ministry of Defense, Hagel was greeted by Bat-Erdene
and reviewed the colorfully uniformed Mongolian Armed Forces Honor Guard before
the two leaders sat down for a meeting and later signed the Joint Vision
Statement for the U.S.-Mongolia Security Relationship.
The statement, Hagel said, “expresses our shared desire to
continue deepening that defense relationship.”
At a joint press conference after the meeting, Hagel
characterized Mongolia, which adopted democracy in 1990, as “a valued partner
of the United States” and “a growing state in regional and global security.”
During the meeting with Bat-Erdene, Hagel told the press, “I
commended the minister for significant contributions the Mongolian Armed Forces
have made to security around the world through participation in many
activities. These include United Nations Peacekeeping Operations and fighting
alongside the United States in Afghan and Iraq.”
Over the past decade the two militaries have benefited from
working together and learning from each other, the secretary added.
According to a U.S. official, the Defense Department
provides about $1 million annually in International Military Education and
Training, or IMET, funding for MAF troops. IMET graduates have led all 10
rotations to Iraq and Afghanistan.
Foreign Military Financing funds have been used to equip the
Mongolian peacekeeping brigade with vehicles, communications equipment and
personal equipment. That funding is about $2 million annually, the official
said.
At the press conference Hagel said, “As Mongolia invests in
defense modernization, the United States will continue to work with our
Mongolian partners to include joint training and exercises. This would include
increasing opportunities for Mongolia to observe and participate in
multilateral exercises.”
The secretary said the defense leaders had also discussed
opportunities for the forces to work even more closely together.
A current exercise in which the United States and Mongolia
participate is Khaan Quest, one of the world’s largest training exercises
focused on peacekeeping operations. A joint venture, Hagel said, is the Five
Hills Training Center near Ulaanbaatar, established in 1983. The joint-training
military site gives units large areas for field training and exercises and
classroom settings for strategic planning lessons.
“We’ll continue to do more together regarding humanitarian
assistance and disaster relief, the secretary said, “and more joint training
exercises that we discussed.”
Hagel added, “We in the United States believe that
military-to-military cooperation between Mongolia and the United States is very
solid, it is very strong, and we look forward to continuing to deepen and
strengthen our military cooperation and relationship.”
A strong U.S.-Mongolia defense relationship is important to
America’s rebalance to the Asia-Pacific region, the secretary noted, adding
that he’s made that point during his current visit to the region and in
discussions with Minister Bat-Erdene.
“I did share with the minister some of my reflections on
this 10-day trip. I briefed him on all the stops I’ve made,” Hagel said. “I
told him about the candid exchanges I’ve had at every stop, including my most
recent stop in China, and I specifically mentioned the conversations I had in
China regarding the regional security issue and China’s and America’s shared
interest in putting our military-to-military relationship on stronger footing,
which we think is good for the Asia-Pacific region.”
Hagel said he’d met with 13 Asia-Pacific defense ministers
on the trip “and for all those discussions in this 10-day trip it’s clear to me
that to preserve the region’s growth and dynamism and opportunities depends on
14 strong security relationships throughout the region, increasing cooperation
in areas of common interest, and resolving disputes peacefully.”
Many challenges face all nations in the region today, he
added, but also many opportunities.
“We must continue to work together to seize these
opportunities as we all build a better future for all of our people,” the
secretary said.
After the press conference, Hagel met with 26 Mongolian
soldiers who have deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan and for peacekeeping
missions in Africa, including Sierra Leone, South Sudan and Chad. The secretary
thanked them for their service and sacrifices.
Mongolia has about 350 troops in Afghanistan today and they
are on their 10th rotation conducting security operations. They also had 10
rotations of troops in Iraq, a defense official said.
Hagel’s final stop in Ulaanbaatar was the Government House
where he met with Mongolian President Tsakhia Elbegdorj.
Hagel’s visit was the first time in 10 years Mongolia’s
defense minister and president have met with a U.S. defense secretary, a senior
defense official said, and the visit was critical to Mongolia's "Third
Neighbor Policy" of outreach to governments beyond China and Russia.
But before Hagel left to meet with the president he received
one more traditional gift from the minister of defense -- a 9.5-year old
Mongolian horse, small but sturdy with a reddish coat, led by a handler to the
area where the secretary was visiting MAF troops.
Hagel beamed and announced that he was naming the horse
Shamrock.
“The reason I’m naming him Shamrock,” Hagel told the smiling
crowd, “is that shamrock was the mascot of a place I graduated from, St.
Bonaventure School in Columbus, Neb.”
Before he left for his meeting with the president, Hagel
admired the horse, thanked the minister, and posed with the horse, throwing his
arm across Shamrock’s withers as he was told that he would receive letters
about Shamrock’s activities and well-being since the secretary was unable to
take the horse to the United States.
Later, in the military aircraft on the way home, the secretary
showed the reporters traveling with him a large framed photograph of Hagel and
Shamrock standing cozily together, Shamrock wearing a hackamore of leather and
polished stones and metal tied with a blue silk scarf.
The secretary said he would send the framed photograph to
St. Bonaventure for the school’s permanent collection of graduate memorabilia.
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