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farmgirl
02-06-2004, 12:20 AM
http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/news/stories.nsf/News/D0D2C2575E46007786256E320016FBDB?OpenDocument&Headline=Dogs+of+war+win+U.S.+hearts+

By Ron Harris
Post-Dispatch
02/05/2004

Pfc Jeremiah Smith is trying to get his dog Niki back home to Iraq.
(HANDOUT )

Yo-ge has made it out of war-torn Iraq. So have Cookie, Ratchet and Private.

But to the dismay of Missouri National Guard Pfc. Jeremiah Smith of Fulton, Mo., and scores of other soldiers and Marines, Niki and dozens of others like her have not. And as the clock ticks down, the chances of their survival diminish.

This is the story of man's - and woman's - best friend and the bond between them, a bond that has created an international effort to save the hundreds of stray dogs that roam Iraqi cities and countryside. That bond also is causing friction within the military as soldiers extend their stay in Iraq and befriend more dogs.

Special Forces Sgt. Major William Gillette discovered Yo-ge (****ounced Yo-Gee) when he and his unit took over a border checkpoint between Iraq and Jordan. The full-blooded German shepherd was being held by one Iraqi and beaten by two others. Gillette, 34, of Clarksville, Tenn., "persuaded" the men to let the dog go and he and Yo-ge have been together ever since. Gillette even speaks to Yo-ge in Arabic.

"He'd walk with me when I checked buildings," said Gillette, who has been wounded in two prior military conflicts. "When I pulled guard duty, he'd go with me. He'd sleep at the foot of my mattress. Me and him just hit it off. So, I made the decision to bring him back."

Smith ran into Niki one day at a gate to his unit's compound.

"There isn't anything in particular that I like about Niki," Smith, 21, said in an e-mail from Iraq. "She is just a great dog to have. She sits and stays on command, not to mention I am training her to fetch a ball. She may not be housebroken yet, but I am still working on that."

Army Staff Sgt. Jason Cowart of Fort Hood, Texas, used Army rations to entice a scrawny puppy that he later named Ratchet from under a trash container. Throughout the war, Ratchet rode next to Cowart in the front seat of a Humvee. And in May, when Cowart learned that his stay in Iraq was being extended another six months, he made arrangements to send Ratchet back to the United States.

Cowart's e-mail was one of the first requests for help that the U.S. office of the World Society for the Protection of Animals received, but it has been far from the last.

"We get three to six calls or e-mails a week from soldiers, fathers, mothers, wives and siblings trying to find out how to get a dog from Iraq to the United States," said Laura Salter, director of the World Society's U.S. headquarters in Framingham, Mass. "So, we've been trying to assist soldiers to find exit routes to bring their animals back to the states."

The organization even has created a brochure to explain to soldiers the hurdles they'll need to jump to get their new friends to the United States.

Don Smith, a 20-year Navy veteran and father of Jeremiah Smith, is one of the family members who called Salter's office.

His son's tour is up in either May or June, and he is hoping to bring the dog to the United States within the next two to three weeks, he said. Don Smith already has sent a pet crate to Iraq for the trip.

Aside from the red tape involved, there is the cost -- $1,000 and up.

The soldiers and agencies trying to help them, however, are finding a way around it.

In the case of Ratchet, WSPA International Projects Director John Walsh contacted an animal lover who works for British Airways. She helped arranged the flight for Ratchet from Iraq to London to Houston and paid all the veterinary fees and shipping costs.

A California animal lover picked up the tab for Private, who was shipped from Iraq to Camp Pendleton, Calif., where he now lives with his Marine buddies.

And friends helped the family that brought over Cookie by lining up to adopt the puppies to whom she gave birth just a few days after arriving in the United States.

Gillette spent his own money, more than $1,500, to get Yo-ge from Iraq to New York City, where his friend, Chris Cornelius of Royal Oaks, Mich., a former Special Forces soldier, met the animal and arranged to fly him to Detroit.

Once in Detroit, Yo-ge was taken to an area veterinarian, Dr. Jack Wright, who treated the dog free of charge for severe arthritis in both hips, a degenerating joint disease and an arthritic elbow.

"If the soldier is over there risking his life, the least I can do is help the dog that he rescued," Wright said.

Additionally, the nearby Royal Oak Fire Department chipped in about $200 to defray costs as did a local real estate agent, Cornelius said.

Military personnel can't use Department of Defense transportation to move nonmilitary animals.

"Pets may be shipped only when the member is being shipped on a permanent change of station orders," explained Capt. Stephen Honda of the U.S. Transportation Command at Scott Air Force Base near Belleville. "When on temporary duty status (as in Iraq or Afghanistan), only working dogs may travel on DoD aircraft."

Consequently, soldiers have to find their own transportation and make arrangements to have the dogs treated by veterinarians before they can travel.

The biggest barrier recently, however, is stepped-up enforcement by the military of a rule against the soldiers having mascots.

Salter of the animal protection group said she often received e-mails from soldiers seeking help, and then received another from the same soldier later explaining that they no longer needed assistance because the camp commander had the dog killed.

Walsh presented an e-mail that he received two days after Christmas from a female sergeant as an example.

"We have had a dog since early June," the e-mail read. "He is well behaved and a little mischievous. We desperately want to get Mo home."

Three weeks later, Walsh received the following e-mail from the same soldier.

"I just wanted to thank you for all of your help. The base camp commander took away our dog of seven months. Supposedly they dropped him off somewhere. My commander and first sergeant tried to tell them that I was very close to getting him home, but they would not listen. I miss the little guy and I wish I had thought to take him home sooner."

One soldier reported that his commanding officer had a standing order to shoot any dogs that come into camp.

Making the effort even more difficult is a new order by neighboring Jordan, the country through which most of the Iraqi dogs had been shipped until recently. The order restricts the flow of all animals across the Iraqi-Jordanian borders.

Don Smith says that no matter what happens, he plans to bring his son's dog home.

"If I have to go into hock for it, I'll have to go for it," he said. "I've done it before."




I found this story sweet and sad at the same time. Any of you BTDTs had any experiences along these lines?

Merik
02-06-2004, 12:59 AM
Smith ran into Niki one day at a gate to his unit's compound

I had the coolest alaskan husky with the most beautiful ice blue eyes ive ever seen named Niki. She died about a year 1/2 ago from cancer that we didnt know she had until it was about 3 weeks from her death. Any c/o that turns away a dog for the soldiers or has it shot is a god damned bastard and should be reprimanded of it cause it helps the troops morale and thier just plain fun to be with.

All 3 of my remaining dogs live with my mom about 600 miles away so I gotta get a puppy here soon cause I miss having one all the time.

EvanL
02-06-2004, 01:09 AM
Smith ran into Niki one day at a gate to his unit's compound

I had the coolest alaskan husky with the most beautiful ice blue eyes ive ever seen named Niki. She died about a year 1/2 ago from cancer that we didnt know she had until it was about 3 weeks from her death. Any c/o that turns away a dog for the soldiers or has it shot is a god damned bastard and should be reprimanded of it cause it helps the troops morale and thier just plain fun to be with.

All 3 of my remaining dogs live with my mom about 600 miles away so I gotta get a puppy here soon cause I miss having one all the time.
get a boxer. they are tons of fun. and strong as ****. i have a 16month old one now. there friggin clowns.

James
02-06-2004, 02:36 AM
"Pets may be shipped only when the member is being shipped on a permanent change of station orders," explained Capt. Stephen Honda of the U.S. Transportation Command at Scott Air Force Base near Belleville. "When on temporary duty status (as in Iraq or Afghanistan), only working dogs may travel on DoD aircraft."


That's lame.

Royal
02-06-2004, 02:57 AM
We (and the RAF) have the same rules. A lot of Brits do the same sort of thing. Teams I've worked with have twice managed to get dogs back to the UK and into quarentine, but it ain't easy.

In my experience, most dogs are handed over to the next team when they rotate in. The RAVC (British Army vets) are usually pretty good (if you keep them in beer).

Herrmannek
02-06-2004, 04:03 AM
Smith ran into Niki one day at a gate to his unit's compound

I had the coolest alaskan husky with the most beautiful ice blue eyes ive ever seen named Niki. She died about a year 1/2 ago from cancer that we didnt know she had until it was about 3 weeks from her death. Any c/o that turns away a dog for the soldiers or has it shot is a god damned bastard and should be reprimanded of it cause it helps the troops morale and thier just plain fun to be with.

All 3 of my remaining dogs live with my mom about 600 miles away so I gotta get a puppy here soon cause I miss having one all the time.

If you want healthy dog, don't buy well-bred dogs, as they have ussualy weak health because of poor genetic pule and humans selection with made them eyes falling of, skin folding in place where it should not etc.., also very close inbred breeding is also often if you buy dog from murmur sellers..Go for mongrels, they are inteligent, healthy, had good psyche and noone will try to steal such dog from you, Also they are Unique modells so you will recognise it in the crowd of the others dogs :)

digrar
02-06-2004, 05:02 AM
When I was in East Timor we took over a dog from the previous Battalion. The locals don't mind a good feed of dog and it was unfortunate that we lost the dog on the first night. We neved did see that dog again.
The sniper cell took on a newborn pup, which they planned to hand over to the next sniper cell. The sniper supervisor was a survival guru who would eat anything. When he made the comment "that when in Rome, do as the Romans do" the boys got a bit worried and handed him over to some locals who promised not to eat him.
One of the company comanders had a big dog that went everywhere with him. They had it teed up to take him to Australia at the end of the tour, but his company sig ran him over in the carpark about 2 weeks before we were due to go home. It would have been sad except he was such a tool and universally disliked.

marktigger
02-06-2004, 06:13 AM
one of the first things the vets have to do on arrival in new theatres is 'op mutley' the destruction of feral dogs it is a distasteful part of their job (i saw an experienced vetenary officer in tears after destroying a litter of abandoned puppies)but unfortunatley in alot of thease areas the feral dog populations carry all sorts of diseases like rabies etc and therefore are a risk to our personnel. The units are briefed and TSO usually are clear about the rules are ie no unit pets. It does happen and 1 unit brought a dog back from Iraq at a cost of about £6000.

Chris1
02-06-2004, 02:12 PM
We (and the RAF) have the same rules. A lot of Brits do the same sort of thing. Teams I've worked with have twice managed to get dogs back to the UK and into quarentine, but it ain't easy.

In my experience, most dogs are handed over to the next team when they rotate in. The RAVC (British Army vets) are usually pretty good (if you keep them in beer).
Had a dog in Kosovo, lil pup almost got ran over by a Warrior and it followed us home guv (honest)
tried to bring it back, response was and I quote "Shoot it, drive out into the woods and chuck it out the back I don't really give a ****"
RAVC took it in, don't know what happened to the little fella but its got to have been better than 5.56 in the back of the head