- Source: Chief of General Staff (Mongolia)
- Direktur Jenderal Organisasi Perdagangan Dunia
- Perang Vietnam
- Badan Intelijen Pusat
- Serangan bom atom Hiroshima dan Nagasaki
- Kematian dan pemakaman Pangeran Philip, Adipati Edinburgh
- Astana
- Arsen
- Gugus Tugas Koronavirus Gedung Putih
- Olimpiade Musim Panas 2012
- 2020-an
- Chief of General Staff (Mongolia)
- General Staff of the Mongolian Armed Forces
- General Staff of the Turkish Armed Forces
- Mongolian Armed Forces
- Chief of the Defence Staff (France)
- Mongolian Ground Force
- Chief of Staff of the French Army
- Provinces of Mongolia
- President of Mongolia
- Nikolai Makarov (general)
The Chief of the General Staff of the Mongolian Armed Forces (Mongolian: Монгол Улсын Зэвсэгт хүчний жанжин штабын дарга, romanized: Mongol Ulsyn Zevsegt khüchnii janjin shtabyn darga) is the highest-ranking professional military leader in the Mongolian Armed Forces. The Chief of the General Staff carries out his duties under the governance of the Commander-in-Chief and serves as the principal advisor to him/her on military affairs. He/She is responsible for the implementation of operational orders and directives to maintain the combat readiness of the armed forces in peacetime. In wartime, the chief directs the military in accordance with the commander-in-chief.
From 1921–1992, the post was referred to as the Chief of the General Staff of the People's Army (Mongolian: Ардын цэргийн жанжин штабын дарга, romanized: Ardyn tsergiin janjin shtabyn darga).
List of Chiefs
= Mongolian People's Republic (1921–1992)
== Mongolia (1990–present)
=References
Жалсапова, Жаргалма (2008). "Nachal'nyy etap formirovaniya regulyarnoy armii v Mongolii (1921—1922 gg.)" Начальный этап формирования регулярной армии в Монголии (1921—1922 гг.) [The initial stage of the formation of a regular army in Mongolia (1921-1922)] (PDF). Vlast (in Russian). 7: 115–117. Retrieved 4 June 2021.
Hata, Ikuhiko, ed. (2001). Sekai shokoku no seido soshiki jinji 1840 - 2000 世界諸国の制度・組織・人事1840-2000 [Systems/Organizations/Personnel Affairs in Countries around the World 1840-2000] (in Japanese). Tokyo: University of Tokyo Press. ISBN 978-4130301220. Retrieved 14 January 2023.