Armed Forces of Mauritania

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Armed Forces of Mauritania
الجيش الوطني الموريتاني
Armée Nationale Mauritanienne
Mauritanian Armed Forces Emblem.svg
Emblem of the Mauritanian Armed Forces
Flag of Mauritanian armed forces and security forces.svg
Flag of the Mauritanian Armed Forces
Service branches Mauritanian National Army
Mauritanian National Navy
Mauritania Islamic Air Force [1]
Headquarters Nouakchott
Website armee.mr
Leadership
President Mohamed Ould Ghazouani
Prime Minister Mokhtar Ould Djay
Minister of Defense Hanena Ould Sidi
Chief of National Army Staff General Mokhtar Ould Bolla Chaabane
Personnel
Conscription 2 years
Available for
military service
718,713 [2]  males, age 15–49,
804,622 females, age 15–49
Fit for
military service
480,042 males, age 15–49,
581,473 females, age 15–49
Reaching military
age annually
36,116 males,
36,826 females
Active personnel31,540 personnel, 5,000 para-military [3]
Reserve personnel 66,000
Expenditure
Budget $231 million (FY2022)
Percent of GDP 3.9% (FY2018)
Industry
Foreign suppliersFlag of France.svg  France
Flag of Russia.svg  Russia
Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg  China
Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States
Flag of Spain.svg  Spain
Flag of Algeria.svg  Algeria
Flag of Morocco.svg  Morocco
Flag of Saudi Arabia.svg  Saudi Arabia
Flag of Belarus.svg  Belarus
Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada
Flag of the United Arab Emirates.svg  United Arab Emirates
Related articles
History Western Sahara War
Mauritania–Senegal Border War
2003 Mauritanian coup d'état attempt
2005 Mauritanian coup d'état
2008 Mauritanian coup d'état
Ranks Military ranks of Mauritania

The Armed Forces of Mauritania (Arabic : الجيش الوطني الموريتاني, romanized: al-Jaysh al-Waṭanī al-Mūrītānī, French: Armée Nationale Mauritanienne [4] ) is the defense force of the Islamic Republic of Mauritania, having an army, navy, air force, gendarmerie, and presidential guard. Other services include the national guard and national police, though they both are subordinated to the Ministry of the Interior. As of 2018, the Mauritanian armed forces budget was 3.9% of the country's GDP.

Contents

The military forces of Mauritania are listed by the IISS Military Balance 2007 as comprising 15,870 personnel with an additional 5,000 paramilitaries, in the national gendarmerie. [3] The Navy (Marine Mauritanienne) has 620 personnel and 11 patrol and coastal combatants, with bases at Nouadhibou and Nouakchott. The CIA reports that the navy includes naval infantry. The small Air Force (Force Aérienne Islamique de Mauritanie, FAIM) has 250 personnel, 2 FTB-337 aircraft, 15 transport aircraft of various types, and 4 SF-260E trainers. The 5,000 paramilitaries are divided in the National Gendarmerie (3,000), and the National Guard (2,000) who both report to the Ministry of the Interior. Other paramilitary services reported by the CIA in 2001 include the National Police, Presidential Guard (BASEP). [5]

History

Former flag of the Mauritanian Armed Forces (1960-2017). Flag of Mauritanian armed forces and security forces (1959-2017).svg
Former flag of the Mauritanian Armed Forces (1960–2017).

Saleh Ould Hanenna, a former army major, led the 2003 Mauritanian coup d'état attempt in June 2003. It aimed to overthrow President Maaouya Ould Sid'Ahmed Taya. He commanded a rebel section of the Army during two days of heavy fighting in Nouakchott. With the failure of the coup Hanenna initially escaped capture, and formed a group called the 'Knights of Change' with Mohamed Ould Cheikhna, but they were arrested on 9 October 2004. [6]

General Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz, a career soldier and high-ranking officer, was a leading figure in the 2005 Mauritanian coup d'état that deposed President Maaouya Ould Sid'Ahmed Taya. [7] [8]

In August 2008, General Ould Abdel Aziz led the 2008 Mauritanian coup d'état that toppled President Sidi Ould Cheikh Abdallahi. Following the latter coup, Abdel Aziz became President of the High Council of State as part of what was described as a political transition leading to a new election. [9] He resigned from that post in April 2009 to stand as a candidate in the July 2009 presidential election, which he won. He was sworn in on 5 August 2009. [10]

Army

In March 1985, the Defense Intelligence Agency reported the army was 8,300 strong with no reserves (Military Intelligence Summary – Africa South of the Sahara, DDB 2680-104-85, ICOD 15 October 1984, Mauritania pages 4, 5, declassified by letter dated 29 April 2014). Reported regions at the time were Region I – Nouadhibou, Region II – Zoueirat, Region III – Atar, Region IV – formerly at Tidjikdja, which no longer existed, Region V – Nema, Region VI – Nouakchott, and Region VII – Rosso. The army was organized into the six regions which each supervised several companies, though there was 'one small autonomous infantry battalion stationed in Nouakchott.'

The Army is 15,000 strong, according to the IISS, with six military regions, two camel corps battalions, one battalion of T-55 battle tanks, one armored reconnaissance squadron, eight garrison infantry battalions, seven motorized infantry battalions, one commando/para battalion, 3 artillery battalions, 4 air defense batteries, one engineer company, and one guard battalion. [3] The 1ère région militaire is at Nouadhibou, 2nd Military Region is at Zouerate, 3rd Military Region is at Atar, 4ème région militaire may be at Tidjikdja, 5th Military Region headquarters is at Néma, [11] The 6th Military Region may be in the area of the capital, and the 7th Military Region may be at Aleg. [12]

The Mauritanian military is currently involved in Operation Enduring Freedom – Trans Sahara. Previous U.S. anti-terrorist engagement included training under the Pan Sahel Initiative. Under the PSI, a 10th Special Forces Group training team carried out a one-week border monitoring training programme in January 2004. [13]

The IISS listed equipment in 2007 as including 35 T-55 main battle tanks, 70 reconnaissance vehicles (20 Panhard AML-60, 40 Panhard AML-90, 10 Alvis Saladin), 25 wheeled APCs (estimate 20 Panhard M3 and 5 Alvis Saracen), 194 artillery pieces (80 towed: 36 HM-2/M-101, 20 D-30, 24 D-74; 114 mortars: 60 60-mm, 30 Brandt 120-mm), 24 MILAN ATGM, 114 recoilless rocket launchers (est. 90 M-40A1 106mm, est 24 M-20 75mm), est 48 RPG-7 Knout, 104 SAMs (est 100 SA-7 Grail, and a reported 4 SA-9 Gaskin), and 82 towed anti-aircraft guns (14.5mm, including 12 ZPU-4, ZU-23-2, 37 mm automatic air defense gun M1939 (61-K), 12 57 mm AZP S-60, and 12 100mm KS-19s). [14]

Equipment

NameImageCaliberTypeOriginNotes
Pistols
MAC-50 [15] MAC-50 detoured.jpg 9×19mm Semi-automatic pistol Flag of France.svg  France Standard issue pistol.
TT-33 [16] TT33.JPG 7.62×25mm Semi-automatic pistol Flag of the Soviet Union.svg  Soviet Union
Submachine guns
FN P90 [17] FN-P90 noBG.jpg FN 5.7×28mm Submachine gun
Personal defense weapon
Flag of Belgium (civil).svg  Belgium
MAT-49 [16] MAT Submachine Gun.jpg 9×19mm Submachine gun Flag of France.svg  France
Star Model Z-45 [18] Museo Eibar Subfusil Z-45 STAR 2.JPG 9×23mm Submachine gun Flag of Spain.svg  Spain
Rifles
SKS [19] Simonov-SKS-45.JPG 7.62×39mm Semi-automatic rifle Flag of the Soviet Union.svg  Soviet Union
AKM [20] AKM automatkarbin Ryssland - 7,62x39mm - Armemuseum rightside noBG.png 7.62×39mm Assault rifle Flag of the Soviet Union.svg  Soviet Union
MAS-49/56 [21] MAS 49 56.JPG 7.5×54mm Semi-automatic rifle Flag of France.svg  France
MAS-36 [ citation needed ] MAS36 crop.jpg 7.5×54mm Bolt-action rifle Flag of France.svg  France
Heckler & Koch G3 H&K G3FS.jpg 7.62×51mm Battle rifle Flag of Germany.svg  West Germany
Flag of France.svg  France
French-made G3s. [22]
Machine guns
PKM [20] PKM DD-ST-85-01257 (2).png 7.62×54mmR General-purpose machine gun Flag of the Soviet Union.svg  Soviet Union
Browning M1919 [20] Browning M1919a.png .30-06 Medium machine gun Flag of the United States.svg  United States
Browning M2 [20] PEO Browning M2E2 QCB (c1).jpg .50 BMG Heavy machine gun Flag of the United States.svg  United States
AA-52 [20] Mitrailleuse-IMG 1728.jpg 7.5×54mm General-purpose machine gun Flag of France.svg  France
Sniper rifles
FR F1 [20] DCB Shooting FR F1.jpg 7.5×54mm Sniper rifle Flag of France.svg  France
Grenade launchers
RPG-7 [16] Rpg-7.jpg 40 mm Rocket-propelled grenade Flag of the Soviet Union.svg  Soviet Union 48 [14]
Tanks, Armoured Vehicles, and Reconnaissance Vehicles
T-55 [23] T-55.jpg Flag of the Soviet Union.svg  Soviet Union 51 in service
ERC-90 Flag of France.svg  France 18 in service
Panhard AML-60 [23] Panhard AML-90 img 2308.jpg Flag of France.svg  France 20 in service
Panhard AML-90 [23] Panhard AML-90 img 2308.jpg Flag of France.svg  France 39 in service
Alvis Saladin [23] Saladin RAF Museum Cosford.jpg Flag of the United Kingdom.svg  United Kingdom 40 in service
Panhard M3 [23] PanhardM3.png Flag of France.svg  France 20 in service
Alvis Saracen [23] Alvis Saracen APC (1953).jpg Flag of the United Kingdom.svg  United Kingdom 5 in service
Panhard EBR 75 [23] Panhard EBR 150808 01.jpg Flag of France.svg  France 15 in service
Artillery and Mortar
D-74 [23] USSR 122mm Field Gun (9732336843).jpg Flag of the Soviet Union.svg  Soviet Union 20 in service
D-30 [23] Khaubitsa D-30 122mm.jpg Flag of the Soviet Union.svg  Soviet Union 20 in service
M101A1 [23] M101-105mm-howitzer-camp-pendleton-20050326.jpg Flag of the United States.svg  United States 35 in service
60-mm Mortar [14] M2-Mortar.jpg Flag of the United States.svg  United States 60 in service
Brandt 120-mm Mortar [14] Dutch Brandt 120 mm MO-120-RT HB Raye Mortar.jpg Flag of France.svg  France 30 in service
Anti-Tank missiles and rockets
MILAN ATGM [14] Tag der Bundeswehr Jagel 2019 HJL 13 noBG.png Flag of France.svg  France 24 in service
M40 recoilless rifle [14] M40 105 mm RR.jpg Flag of the United States.svg  United States 90 in service
M20 recoilless rifle [14] M20 75 mm recoilless rifle korean war.jpg Flag of the United States.svg  United States 24 in service
SAMs and Anti-aircraft guns
SA-7 Grail [14] SA-7.jpg Flag of the Soviet Union.svg  Soviet Union 100 in service
SA-9 Gaskin [14] Soviet SA-9 Gaskin.jpg Flag of the Soviet Union.svg  Soviet Union 4 in service
Towed anti-aircraft guns [14] ZU-23-2 in Saint Petersburg.jpg Flag of the Soviet Union.svg  Soviet Union 82 in service (including 12 ZPU-4, ZU-23-2, 37 mm automatic air defense gun M1939 (61-K)).
57 mm AZP S-60 [14] S-60-57mm-hatzerim-1.jpg Flag of the Soviet Union.svg  Soviet Union 12 in service
100mm KS-19 [14] Stalin line - KS-19.JPG Flag of the Soviet Union.svg  Soviet Union 12 in service.

Among reported special forces units are:

Air Force

After achieving independence in 1960 the Faidem's (Force Aerienne Islamique de Mauritanie) was supplied equipment by France, such as C-47s and MH.1521 Broussards, which was later replaced by the Britten-Norman BN-2A Defender between 1976 and 1978 and had operated as a transport and observation squadron in the Western Sahara War. [24] During the same time two Cessna 337s and two DHC-5 Buffalo STOL transports were supplied in 1977 and 1978 with one DHC-5 crashing almost immediately and the other being returned to De Havilland Canada in 1979. After the Polisario Front shot down one Defender and damaged two in 1978 the Mauritanian government ordered six IA-58 Pucarás for ground attack duties from Argentina; this order was later cancelled after a Mauritanian military coup.

The Air Force School was created in Atar. It was founded to train pilots, mechanics, other crewmen for the Air Force. [25]

More recent procurements have been from China in the form of the Harbin Y-12 II turboprop transports were delivered in September 1995, one crashed in April 1996. A second one crashed on 12 July 2012. [26] The Xian Y7-100C (a copy of the AN-24 transport) was delivered from October 1997, which crashed in May 1998. The Air Force has recently received their order of Embraers.

Aircraft

Mauritania Air Force A-29B Super Tucano at Paris Air Show 2013. Mauritania AF Embraer A-29B Super Tucano 5T-MAW PAS 2013 02.jpg
Mauritania Air Force A-29B Super Tucano at Paris Air Show 2013.
Mauritanian Douglas C-47A Dakota in the Sahara. Mauritania airforce plane in the Sahara.jpg
Mauritanian Douglas C-47A Dakota in the Sahara.
AircraftOriginTypeVariantIn serviceNotes
Combat aircraft
EMB 314 Super Tucano Brazil COIN more than 4
Maritime patrol
BN-2 Islander United Kingdom Maritime patrol 3 [27]
Cessna 208 United States Maritime patrol 21 on order [27]
Piper PA-31 United States Maritime patrol 2 [27]
Transport
Basler BT-67 United StatesTransport/Utility1 [27] Modified Douglas DC-3 with P&W PT6A Turboprop engines
Cessna 441 United StatesVIP transport1 [27]
Pilatus PC-6 SwitzerlandUtility1 [27]
Harbin Y-12 ChinaTransport1 [27]
Helicopters
Harbin Z-9 ChinaUtility2 [27]
AgustaWestland AW109 ItalyUtility2 [27]
MD-500 [23] United StatesUtility4
Trainer aircraft
EMB-312 BrazilTrainer4 [27]
SIAI-Marchetti SF.260 ItalyTrainer4 [27]

Mauritania has developed a five-year plan to develop its navy into a force that is capable of defending the country's 235,000 km squared exclusive economic zone, Admiral Isselkou Ould Cheik El-Weli said during a promotion ceremony held at the Nouadhibou naval base in late May 2017. The Saharamedias.net website reported that the plan includes the acquisition of two 60-meter vessels, which are currently under construction, and "mid-sized ships", as well as the formation of three companies of marines. No further details were provided. [28]

The Mauritanian Navy was created on 25 January 1966, after the extension of Mauritania's territorial waters from 12 to 30 nautical miles (22 to 56 kilometres). By 1972 the navy had one small patrol gunboat and two small patrol craft that performed port control and customs duties. In 1987 the navy had thirteen boats. Of these boats, only eight were seaworthy, and the navy could send only two vessels out to open water at a time. Mauritania's exclusive economic zone (EEZ) extended 200 nmi (370 km) out from the coast, but even if effective coastal surveillance were possible, the navy's vessels would not be able to control Mauritania's waters. Nouadhibou housed the major naval base; Nouakchott housed a secondary base. [29]

Ship inventory

A patrol boat similar to this one is used by the Navy. Gedarmerie maritime (remix).jpg
A patrol boat similar to this one is used by the Navy.
VesselOriginTypeIn serviceNotes
LIMAM EL HADRAMIChina Patrol boat Obtained in 2001
TIMBEDRAChina Patrol boat Obtained in 2016 . CMS from France (LYNCEA CMS)
GORGOLChina Patrol boat Obtained in 2016. CMS from France (LYNCEA CMS)
Abourbekr Ben AmerFrance Patrol boat Obtained in 1992
El Nasr France Patrol boat 1 [30] Patra-class
Z'barGermany Patrol boat 1 [30] Neustadt-class

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