International Team Conducts Gobi Wolf 2015

By Capt. Chase Spears, U.S. Army Alaska Public AffairsMarch 31, 2015

General officers discuss opening of GObi Wolf 2015
1 / 9 Show Caption + Hide Caption – U.S. Army Pacific Deputy Commanding General (Operations), Maj. Gen. Gregory Bilton and Chief of the National Emergency Management Agency, Brig. Gen. Tuvshin Badral discuss the opening of Gobi Wolf 2015 on Mar. 24, 1015. Gobi Wolf 2015 is a civil-mili... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
Gobi Wolf  2015 press conference
2 / 9 Show Caption + Hide Caption – From left to right, Director of the National Emergency Management Agency's Disaster Preparedness Department Col. Batmunkh Uuganbayar, Chief of the National Emergency Management Agency, Brig. Gen. Tuvshin Badral, U.S. Army Pacific Deputy Commanding Ge... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
Mongolia and the Alaska National Guard discuss  responding to emergency conditions
3 / 9 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Gobi Wolf participants from Mongolia and the Alaska National Guard discuss methods of responding to emergency conditions during the table-top exercise portion of Gobi Wolf 2015 in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia. Gobi Wolf 2015 is a civil-military disaster pre... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
National Emergency Management Agency's mobile command post
4 / 9 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Gobi Wolf participants from Mongolia and the U.S. visit the National Emergency Management Agency's mobile command post during a disaster-relief training event at Chinggis Khaan International Airport on Mar. 27, 2015. Gobi Wolf 2015 is a civil-militar... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
Officials stage relief supplies at Chinggis Khaan International Airport
5 / 9 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Mongolian officials stage relief supplies at Chinggis Khaan International Airport during a disaster-readiness field exercise. The event was executed in coordination with Gobi Wolf 2015, a civil-military disaster preparedness and response initiative t... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
Mongolian officials stage relief supplies
6 / 9 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Mongolian officials stage relief supplies at Chinggis Khaan International Airport during a disaster-readiness field exercise. The event was executed in coordination with Gobi Wolf 2015, a civil-military disaster preparedness and response initiative t... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
Role-player jumps from a window during disaster readiness drill
7 / 9 Show Caption + Hide Caption – A role-player jumps from a window at the Khan-uul District Hospital in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia during a disaster-readiness drill. The event was executed in coordination with Gobi Wolf 2015, a civil-military disaster preparedness and response initiative... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
Disaster readiness drill
8 / 9 Show Caption + Hide Caption – A rescue worker rappels through a window at the Khan-uul District Hospital in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia during a disaster-readiness drill. The event was executed in coordination with Gobi Wolf 2015, a civil-military disaster preparedness and response ini... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
Gobi Wolf 2015 team brief U.S. Army Pacific Deputy Commanding General
9 / 9 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Mongolian members of the Gobi Wolf 2015 team brief U.S. Army Pacific Deputy Commanding General (Operations), Maj. Gen. Gregory Bilton on their focus group results at the conclusion of a disaster-readiness drill at Khan-uul District Hospital in Ulaanb... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL

Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia -- The governments of Mongolia and the United States conducted an earthquake-readiness exercise together this week here. Gobi Wolf 2015 is a civil-military disaster preparedness and response initiative that focuses on regional readiness in response to natural and man-made disasters.

Gobi Wolf is part of the Pacific Resilience Disaster Response Exercise and Exchange program, which focuses on interagency coordination and foreign humanitarian assistance. It is designed to test disaster response processes while maximizing realism through a series of scenarios.

Approximately 100 participants from 30 governmental, non-governmental, municipal and military agencies across Mongolia, the U.S. and international relief agencies participated in the disaster response exercise & exchange.

According to Justin Pummell, U.S. Army Pacific program manager for pacific resilience "The value of Gobi Wolf is its ability to promote interagency coordination and civil-military cooperation between humanitarian-assistance/disaster-relief stakeholders from the Government of Mongolia, the U.S., international government agencies, non-governmental agencies and others; This builds relationships, which can expedite communication during a real-world emergency."

The two primary objectives of Gobi Wolf are to promote interagency coordination and civil-military coordination between the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), the Mongolia Armed Forces, the U.S. and others, and to increase the capacity of the Government of Mongolia to know what would be available to them as international tools and services to support government-led disaster-response efforts.

"The exercise offers an outstanding opportunity for us to work together, build the relationships between organizations that will allow us to respond more effectively in the time of disaster," said Maj. Gen. Gregory Bilton, deputy commanding general (operations) for U.S. Army Pacific. "This is why exercises like Gobi Wolf are so important.

The four-day exercise included disaster risk and multi-agency capacity briefs, a table-top exercise, and field training events at the Chinggis Khaan International Airport and the Khan-uul District Hospital in Ulaanbaatar.

The exercise evaluated Mongolia disaster readiness through five separate focus areas including national emergency management, media relations/communication, military considerations, first responder, and international government and non-governmental agencies.

The five workgroups spent the exercise responding to scenario events to evaluate how the 30 agencies involved would respond to assist affected populations in an actual earthquake. The strengths and weaknesses identified are being recorded and will be analyzed to improve disaster-response planning.

"It is designed to grow and reinforce capacity through scenarios that simulate reality, identify procedural gaps, and practice techniques required for efficient and collaborative response by civilian and military authorities," said Pummell. "Pacific Resilience practices how militaries support civilian authorities when required during disaster situations, the reception and dissemination of foreign humanitarian assistance and the strategic communication required to successfully execute emergency management plans."

Gobi Wolf is part of U.S. Army Pacific's Pacific Resilience program, USARPAC's main platform for identifying best practices and lessons learned across the humanitarian assistance/disaster relief spectrum. Its mission is to enhance all parties' abilities to respond and recover from an emergency situation.

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Opening Ceremony Kicks Off Disaster Management Exercise Gobi Wolf 2015