Posted By Thomas E. Ricks Share

By Rebecca Frankel
Best Defense Chief Canine Correspondent 

"At the word ‘halt' the dogs stopped, at the word ‘sit' the dogs sat, at the word ‘down' the dogs lay flat; at the word ‘stay' the dogs stayed put as they were, while the men, the leashes dropped on the ground, marched on without them." -The WAAGs, by H. I. Brock, New York Times 1942

While doing some photo searching for an FP story, I came across a series of photographs shot in Helmand province this week of U.S. Marines with the unit's bomb-sniffing dogs on patrol and relaxing at base. (This pup is Corporal Books.) More than just cute pooches or pets, these dogfaces are fellow soldiers tasked with dangerous work, patrolling for IEDs and land mines. What struck me most about these photos more than the sincerity of affection on display was the sense of comfort and ease seeming so much at odds with their surroundings. 

Presently, the United States has 2,800 dogs enrolled in military service, "the largest canine force in the world." Where there is a U.S. troop surge to Afghanistan, so too is there a dog surge. As Nick Guidas, the manager of the K-9 unit in Afghanistan, told AP earlier this week, he expects to have as many as 219 dogs by July.

[Guidas] said each dog can work for five or six years, but the demands of the terrain and of the mission are harsh, particularly on the dogs' joints. If a dog is injured or sick, it is not sent out on operations.

Only two military dogs have been lost in southern Afghanistan in the past five years, Guidas said.

"We take very good care of these dogs," he said. "In some cases they are treated better than us."

The United States began using canines in its war efforts during WWI (though the official contingent wasn't inducted into the Army until 1942). The history of wardogs is as long as it is rich, plush with uplifting accounts of remarkable feats on the front lines of battle - dogs running fearless into spraying bullets, pulling injured men to safety -- stories we'll delve into in future posts.

We invite Best Defense readers with photographs and tales of wardogs to please send them our way.

CHRISTOPHE SIMON/AFP/Getty Images

 
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CMADDALONI

7:54 PM ET

January 29, 2010

War Dogs

From what I've seen - mascot dogs are very popular on FOBs:

http://militarytimes.com/blogs/line-of-sight/2009/12/07/while-you-were-out/

In fact, I have yet to be on a FOB in Afghanistan without one....

-Chris

 

CHARLIEFORD

3:23 PM ET

January 30, 2010

That's a beautiful picture . . .

Not just about dogs at war, it also captures the mystery of man-dog relationships. The dog's completely in the moment--dogs are always in the moment, which is maybe why we're attracted to them, in part? Whitman:

I think I could turn and live with animals, they're so placid and self contain'd,
I stand and look at them long and long.

They do not sweat and whine about their condition,
They do not lie awake in the dark and weep for their sins,
They do not make me sick discussing their duty to God,
Not one is dissatisfied, not one is demented with the mania of owning things,
Not one kneels to another, nor to his kind that lived thousands of years ago,
Not one is respectable or unhappy over the earth.

The marine, on the other hand, where's he? Can't say. With a wife or girlfriend? Worrying about tomorrow? Remembering yesterday?

A man and his dog ... Great picture. Thanks.

 

TYRTAIOS

4:02 PM ET

January 30, 2010

Nice comments! Marines are an

Nice comments! Marines are an easy mark for dogs and kids (so are soldiers; the Navy likes SEALs.) : )

 

CHARLIEFORD

4:39 PM ET

January 30, 2010

Do sailors ...

... sneak cats on board? Or, are they allowed to?

 

TOM RICKS

5:26 PM ET

January 30, 2010

Great comment

I didn't know that Whitman poem--thank you!
Best,
Tom Ricks

 

CHARLIEFORD

12:22 AM ET

January 31, 2010

Maybe that's what happens ...

... when you spend the sixties in Afghanistan?

;-)

It got quite a bit of circulation back then, as all things Whitman did, and Thoreau, and Alan Watts, and lots of similar things. It seemed to fit perfectly with the anti-rationalism that was such a big part of the counter-culture. It was like: McNamara is a rationalist; all those Dow-Chemical folk manufacturing napalm are rationalists; etc., etc., so . . . rationality must be bad! Back to the pre-rational. A friend of mine was in a commune for awhile where such ideas were pretty rife, and he had his eureka moment (that it doesn't really work) when one of the male members divested himself of his clothes, squatted in the middle of the living room, and proceeded to have a bowel-movement. Ah, the sixties! See what you missed, Tom? (And yes, I realize that wasn't "the norm." But when that's even there, on the edge, you know you're in trouble.)

 

Thomas E. Ricks covered the U.S. military for the Washington Post from 2000 through 2008.

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