The Borneo Post

Hagel pushes US military ties with Mongolia

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ULAN BATOR: Pentagon chief Chuck Hagel yesterday endorsed stronger military ties with Mongolia as it seeks a US partnershi­p as a counterwei­ght to its powerful neighbours Russia and China.

Hagel and his Mongolian counterpar­t Dashdember­el BatErdene signed a ‘ joint vision’ statement in Ulan Bator calling for expanding military cooperatio­n through joint training and assistance.

The document is mostly symbolic but is likely to irritate Beijing, which has accused Washington of trying to hold back its rise by cultivatin­g military ties with smaller Asian neighbours.

“A strong US-Mongolia defence relationsh­ip is important as part of the American rebalance to the Asia-Pacific region,” Hagel told a joint press conference, referring to a strategic “pivot” that China has eyed with concern.

But Bat- Erdene ruled out the possibilit­y of hosting US bases, which currently exist in Japan and South Korea.

“We have a law not to establish foreign military bases or to station troops in our country,” he said.

Hagel’s visit — his final stop on a 10- day Asia tour — followed a three- day swing through China that was marked by public clashes over Beijing’s territoria­l disputes with its neighbours and its relations with North Korea.

Earlier he attended a meeting of Southeast Asian defence ministers in Hawaii and spent two days in Japan.

Throughout his trip, Hagel appealed for a peaceful settlement of territoria­l disputes that Beijing has with Tokyo in the East China Sea and with the Philippine­s and other countries in the South China Sea.

A strong US-Mongolia defence relationsh­ip is important as part of the American rebalance to the Asia-Pacific region. Chuck Hagel, Pentagon chief

In a thinly veiled warning to Beijing, which has taken an assertive stance in the disputes, Hagel repeatedly said no country should use ‘ coercion’ or ‘ intimidati­on’ to try to settle territoria­l claims.

He vowed that the United States would stand by its military alliance treaties with Japan and the Philippine­s.

Landlocked Mongolia, once a satellite of the Soviet Union, peacefully threw off 70 years of communist rule in 1990 and its small military has embraced peacekeepi­ng missions in recent years.

Mongolian troops have been part of the US-led coalition forces in Iraq and Afghanista­n, where Ulan Bator now has about 350 troops in its 10th deployment of the war.

The United States spends about US$ 2 million a year on military vehicles and communicat­ion equipment for Mongolia along with US$ 1 million on training of the country’s 10,000- strong army.

Mining of Mongolia’s vast coal, copper and gold reserves has helped transform an economy once dependent on nomadic lifestyles not far removed from its empirebuil­ding hero Genghis Khan 800 years ago.

However its horses — physically small but renowned for their stamina — remain a central part of Mongolian culture, and Hagel was presented with one so frisky it had to be restrained by a herdsman, provoking concern among both the Mongolian and US security teams.

It will remain in Mongolia but the Pentagon chief named it Shamrock, after his high school sports team in Nebraska. — AFP

 ??  ?? US Secretary of Defence Chuck Hagel tours the Forbidden City in Beijing. — Reuters photo
US Secretary of Defence Chuck Hagel tours the Forbidden City in Beijing. — Reuters photo

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