Posted on 06/22/2007 5:20:09 PM PDT by SandRat
FORT HUACHUCA When it comes to using dogs as part of the Armys military police community, a small number of two- and four-legged teams are involved in providing protection.
The 18th Military Police Detachments Military Working Dogs section on this Southern Arizona post has eight dogs and handlers assigned, but not all of them work on the fort.
As members are being called to deploy to Iraq and Afghanistan, so are the working dog teams.
One team, Sgt. Stephen Gruden and Staff Sgt. Goliath, is currently deployed.
On Saturday, Sgt. James Adolfson and J.R., another four-legged staff sergeant, will head to Afghanistan on a yearlong deployment.
Since Adolfson and J.R. have become a team and the notification of deployment has come down, they have been doing additional training.
The teams are constantly being trained, but for Adolfson, extra time in the field keeps he and J.R. better prepared.
On Thursday, the pair and other teams took part in training on a dirt road near the forts Radar Ridge.
Kennel Master Sgt. 1st Class Ruben Alaniz said the posts environment is similar to Iraq and Afghanistan, especially in the summer months.
Adolfson said it helps to train J.R. for two or three hours in the heat so the dog will be acclimatized when they deploy.
Alaniz deployed with Anka to Afghanistan last year, only to return early when he and the animal suffered minor concussions from an explosion.
Like J.R., Anka is a specialized search dog, one that works off a leash being sent out to check out afar potential deadly hazards. The dogs rank is master sergeant, which is new due to Alanizs promotion.
On the dirt road, both dogs worked an abandoned truck, something enemy forces in both countries like to pack with explosives. The handlers keep in sight of the dogs, using hand signals to direct the animals.
Anka hovers around to determine if there are explosives.
J.R. acts more like a pointer, his nose targeting the area and tail straight back, Adolfson said.
Capt. Theresa Allaire, the detachments new commander, watched the two dogs train. The importance of the teams cannot be overstated, she said.
And, in the continuing world of deployment for Americas armed forces the need for dogs to help detect explosive devices is important, she said.
Adolfson finished dog handler training at Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio, Texas, last year.
I knew we would deploy, he said.
His wife, Amy, understands when he became a handler that deployment would come, Adolfson said. The couple have a 2 1/2-year-old daughter, Taylor.
As a specialized search dog, J.R. was ready to find explosives in the pickup truck.
Small amounts of explosive material are used during training so the animals can keep their noses on the job, so to speak.
Anka and J.R. are the only specialized search dogs at the fort kennel. Adolfson described them as human and dog friendly.
They are not trained not to be aggressive, although when the two leave by commercial plane this weekend, J.R. will be muzzled, a needed protection since the dog will fly in the aircrafts passenger compartment.
The other dogs at the forts military police kennels are trained to be aggressive and protect their handlers while they search for explosives or narcotics.
They are basically leash controlled, although they can be let off the control line to attack.
Earlier this year, two teams, Spc. James Tuman and Britt and Staff Sgt. Matt Clayton and Beast, returned at different times after 12-month deployments to Iraq. Both soldiers was deployed to Iraq in 2003, with Clayton as a dog handler team and Tuman as a gunner.
In the world of military working dogs, the animals always outrank their handlers, making Britt a sergeant and Beast a sergeant first class. As handlers are promoted, so are their dogs. The old Army had dogs outrank the handlers because if the human mistreats the animals they can be charged with harming a superior ranking soldier.
Dogs also can receive decorations. During their last deployments, Britt and Beast were given Army Commendation Medals.
Clayton said missions in Iraq included cordon searches, manning check points and participating in raids looking for insurgents.
There are scary times.
With a week to go on his deployment, Clayton was instructing new soldier and dog teams when a firefight broke out near the Tigris River. It was dangerous, and firing continued for a long period of time, he said.
For Tuman, there was no one specific time when he thought it was more dangerous.
The whole time was, he said.
But looking back at his most recent deployment. Tuman said, It was an awesome experience.
Spc. Patricio Tristan, a young soldier in training as a dog handler, also was with his dog, Sgt. Szark, on Thursday. Tristan played the part of a person Clayton and Tuman and their dogs were looking for inside the LakeSide Activity Centre, which is no longer in use.
When Britt and Beast found him, they attacked the specialist, who wore padding to protect him from their bites.
When Tuman and Britt marched the soldier out of the building, the dog barked an almost perfect cadence as if the woofs were calling out left, left, left.
HERALD/REVIEW senior reporter Bill Hess can be reached at 515-4615.

WOOF
The losses for these dogs were high and there's a "War Dog Memorial" on Guam so their deeds will not be lost to posterity, but they killed more than they died.
May God go with these brave, wonderful soldiers.
and their furry freinds.
We could be politically correct and use cats for that. Here, Panther, go sic em... “raaaaaaaaaaaaarrrrrrrrrrrrrr!!!!”
nothing beats a Malinois ! I have two and they are by far the greatest dogs I have ever owned.
They will back down if you hurt them.
Doberman fan here. They're smart too, and will kill or die no matter how badly hurt. They're big and strong and can cover twice the ground of the Belgian Shepherd. Eyes of an eagle and the nose of a bloodhound.
They are simply the quickest dog in the world in the first 50 feet...even quicker in the first 10.
They're snuggle-muffins to boot:)
In the world of military working dogs, the animals always outrank their handlers, making Britt a sergeant and Beast a sergeant first class. As handlers are promoted, so are their dogs. The old Army had dogs outrank the handlers because if the human mistreats the animals they can be charged with harming a superior ranking soldier.<<<<
I like this, good idea.
It is not a surprise that the dogs are so wonderful.
When you need help, it does not matter much how you spell the help, G O D or reverse it to D O G.
I’ve only come to learn of all the animals the military uses just these past 4 years or so.
I was most taken with the pigeons. I only learned about that when I brought my kids to see the movie Valient. Valient was one of the homing pigeons used during the war.
Animal use by fighting forces is fascinating, and has been going on for centuries. Glad to see it get some publicity in recent years.
My best friend’s brother is a marine biologist, training dolphins and porpoises for military use.
I think it was around the first of April that I found the declassified report on the use of Pidgeons by the CIA, during WW2.
I remember posting it, but not where I got it.
They said they did not get a lot of good info from the ones they dropped into France, but felt that it confused the Germans in the long run, and was partly responsible for the Germans choosing to defend the wrong location on D-Day.
Think it was at the CIA site, there were several stories with it, that I found very interesting.
It is amazing what they can train animals to do, even more so is the fact the animals do so much with no training.

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Sorry, looks like a German Shepherd to me. What say you?
I don’t believe that’s a Belgian. And it’s MALINOIS, not Shepherd.
I’d bet that’s a German Shepherd. The most versatile and best at all that ever was. In case you ever wonder why 95% of police/military dogs have ever been GS. ;-)
What a handsome couple you are!!
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