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Dogs of War: Friends and Saviors of Marines in Afghanistan

Lance Cpl. Nick Lacarra, a dog handler with Combined Anti-Armor Team 2, Weapons Company, 3rd Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, and 20-year-old native of Long Beach, Calif., walks through a field with Coot, an improvised explosive device detection dog, during a partnered security patrol with Afghan Border Police, Jan. 30, 2012. On deployment in Helmand province's Garmsir district, the 'America's Battalion' dog handlers and their improvised explosive device detection dogs live, travel and work together. In a combat environment largely devoid of the safety and comforts of home, the energetic Labrador retrievers are neither pets nor expendable objects. They're faithful friends and saviors of Marines. Since arriving here in November, IED detection dogs have found four drug caches and two IEDs. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Reece Lodder)

Lance Cpl. Stuart Ferreri, a dog handler with Guard Force Platoon, 3rd Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, and 21-year-old native of Northglenn, Colo., and Fancy, an improvised explosive device detection dog, search the outside of a truck commuting past Checkpoint Drahbiash while Afghan National Police patrolman Dost Mohammad examines the contents of its bed during Operation Gridlock here, March 21, 2012. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Reece Lodder)

Cpl. Kyle Click, a dog handler with 3rd Platoon, Kilo Company, 3rd Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, and 22-year-old native of Grand Rapids, Mich., shares a moment with Windy, an improvised explosive device detection dog, while waiting to resume a security patrol here, Feb. 27, 2012. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Reece Lodder)

Cpl. Kyle Click, a dog handler with 3rd Platoon, Kilo Company, 3rd Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, and 22-year-old native of Grand Rapids, Mich., and Windy, an improvised explosive device detection dog, search the perimeter of the Safar School compound here, March 18, 2012. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Reece Lodder)

Cpl. Kyle Click, a dog handler with 3rd Platoon, Kilo Company, 3rd Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, and 22-year-old native of Grand Rapids, Mich., walks past a produce vendor with Windy, an improvised explosive device detection dog, during a security patrol here, Feb. 27, 2012. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Reece Lodder)

Lance Cpl. Nick Lacarra, a dog handler with Combined Anti-Armor Team 2, Weapons Company, 3rd Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, and 20-year-old native of Long Beach, Calif., and Coot, an improvised explosive device detection dog, hold security in a field during a partnered security patrol with Afghan Border Police here, Jan. 30, 2012. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Reece Lodder)

Cpl. Sharadan Reetz (left), 21, from Indianola, Iowa, and Lance Cpl. Jarrett Hatley, 21, from Millingport, N.C., an assaultman and a dog handler with 3rd Platoon, Lima Company, 3rd Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, rest next to Blue, an improvised explosive device detection dog, after clearing compounds with Afghan National Army soldiers during Operation Winter Offensive here, Jan. 4, 2012. On a Feb. 8 security patrol with Afghan National Army soldiers in Helmand province's Garmsir district, Hatley and Blue found a 40-pound IED in a canal only moments before a dozen more men were to cross it. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Reece Lodder)

Lance Cpl. Isaiah Schult, a dog handler with Jump Platoon, Headquarters and Service Company, 3rd Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, and 20-year-old Indianapolis native, jokes with Afghan children while providing security with Big, an improvised explosive device detection dog, during a shura outside a local residence here, Nov. 22, 2011. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Reece Lodder)

GARMSIR DISTRICT, Afghanistan— Without the Marine’s watchful eyes and his dog’s trained nose, the round metal container packed with 40 pounds of homemade explosives could have wreaked destruction on their patrol.

The Feb. 8 security patrol through the Loya Darvishan region of southern Helmand province was no different than the hundreds of others conducted by Lance Cpl. Jarrett Hatley, his improvised explosive device detection dog Blue and fellow Marines with 3rd Platoon, Lima Company, 3rd Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment.

While passing through the tiny farming village of Daywala, their Afghan National Army partners stopped to search a suspicious compound. Upon finding several mortar casings, the patrol moved to search the surrounding compounds. They avoided the roads due to the threat of IEDs, opting to cross into an adjacent field through an arid, three-foot canal.

Before stepping into the canal, Hatley noticed a darker patch of dirt that looked recently disturbed. Halting the patrol, he sent Blue to sniff for explosives. Moments later, the yellow Labrador retriever laid down next to the area, confirming the presence of an IED on the path a dozen more men were about to travel.

Hatley was thankful he and Blue found the IED. He considers anything less a failure.

“While we’re on patrol, everyone looks to Blue and me to keep them safe,” said Hatley, a 21-year-old native of Millingport, N.C. “If we mess up, my friends behind me could get blown up … because of my mistake.”

This necessary pressure constantly rests on the minds of 30 ‘America’s Battalion’ dog handlers and their Labrador retrievers, who are currently supporting their fellow Marines and Afghan National Security Forces in Garmsir.

During pre-deployment training in Hawaii last year, Hatley — a rifleman by trade — and other 3/3 infantrymen raised their hands at the opportunity to become dog handlers. Some were eager for the challenge of learning a new skill; others simply wanted to help protect Marines and Afghans from getting hurt, Hatley said.

Between spending seven months “running and gunning” for insurgents on deployment in Helmand’s Nawa district in 2010 and cross training as handlers last year, the Marines’ roles and responsibilities changed. Though they remained with their platoons, they were now called to think and care for two.

On deployment in Garmsir, thousands of miles from safety in the States, the pairs of IED hunters travel, work and live together. They fly on helicopters en route to clearing operations, search passersby at vehicle checkpoints and rest next to one another after exhausting patrols.

Clearing patrol routes from the front, handlers and dogs are the first line of defense against the enemy IED threat. Together, they experience biting sandstorms, bitter cold and, as the summer months near, scorching heat. As a team, they endure the arduous grind of security patrols and standing post.

“They get tired just like we do … they’re dogs, not machines,” said Lance Cpl. Nick Lacarra, a dog handler with Combined Anti-Armor Team 2, Weapons Company, 3/3, and 20-year-old native of Long Beach, Calif. “They still want to chase animals and jump into the canal to cool off.”

While the dogs are often a challenge to manage, they’re vital to each mission. Their presence and proficiency helps riflemen focus on their mission instead of worrying about striking an IED, Hatley said. Since arriving here in November, IED detection dogs have found four drug caches and two IEDs.

Though the latter number is a fraction of the 25 IEDs 3/3 Marines have uncovered, the handlers are thankful these finds are fewer than they’ve historically been in Garmsir. In both Nawa and Garmsir, they’ve seen friends and peers maimed by IED explosions. As they continue their search for IEDs here, they’re quick to agree “less is more.”

“I’d rather not find any IEDs this deployment than have my dog and me miss one,” said Lance Cpl. Cody Varnell, a dog handler with CAAT-2, Weapons Company, 3/3, and 20-year-old native of Mesquite, Texas.

In between their challenging duties, handlers and their fellow Marines often unwind by playing ‘fetch’ with the dogs using plastic bumpers and Frisbees. Since the good-tempered Labrador retrievers are consistently happy and energetic, they always help boost the Marines’ morale, Lacarra said.

“Even when we’re not patrolling, we keep our dogs engaged,” Lacarra said. “This keeps them active and takes our minds off of what we have going on.”

In a combat environment largely devoid of the safety and comforts of home, the energetic Labrador retrievers are neither pets nor expendable objects. They’re faithful friends and saviors of Marines.

“My dog Blue is pretty much like another Marine, I guess,” Hatley said. “He doesn’t know he’s doing it, but he’s protecting all of us. If I have him on a patrol and there’s an IED that could hurt us, I know he’ll find it.”

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  • Mml

    My son just got home with his dog!

  • Mprzlomski

    Awesome !

  • MWFinn

    First and foremost, and from one Marine to another,  Semper Fi and stay safe Marines.  Second, this is a great story/collection of
    photos about the partnership of man and his best friend.  The photos really capture the bond that is
    created between a Marine and his dog in the most austere of environments.  The loyalty that results from that is
    nothing short of amazing.  Concluding with
    the release at the end really ties the story together and highlights the amazing
    work that Lance Cpl. Hartley, Blue, and the numerous other Marine/Canine teams
    complete.  Great work and great story.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=675769330 Timothy R. Hernandez

    I remember the bomb dogs on each of my deployments, they always made me feel secure in the fact that we were safe from IEDs in and outside the wire where ever they were present.  The presence of these dog teams on the battle field can never be over stated, this is a practice and tradition that should never be cut from our opperational force.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Steve-Guy/100003674075522 Steve Guy

    How can an interested recruit get into this kind of MOS/field?  This seems like an excellent field in the military and one that should be advertised further. 

  • Anonymous

    As a Marine who served in the first Gulf war.I encourage evry Marine to write a book about there experience in the Marines.Try it may become a #1 seller.Your story can encourage and be inspirational to others.I have wrote a book titled Night Mission To Mogadishu in which I was a member of a 60 man heavily armed rescue force combined of 51 U.S. Marines and 9 Navy Seals in a Operation code named Operation Eastern Exit.My website is the same as the title of my book.Semper Fi

  • Mollypops

    I LOVE war dogs!

  • Anonymous

    God bless marine

  • Marcus Cannon

    I am enlisting at the end of summer. Plan on taking the roll of a dog handler in the USMC!

  • Georgian Mountain Lion

    dogs are awesome….

  • http://www.iHateTheUSMC.com Civilian

    Wouldnt it be cool if every Marine was issued a puppy right after bootcamp? Elite warriors with badass dogs at their side. Awesome. 

  • Kirkner4

    Thank God for our pets…..especially dogs..

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=685717352 Kaila Blaire Sanneman

    it’s not a pissing contest…im pretty damn happy that that is all they found! would you really wish more danger in the path of your brothers?..cool. 

  • 9327919

    Yo! Grunt!  But, I am impressed anytime one of the troops are saved.  I am impressed that your squad saved so many lives too.  AND thank you for your service!    Korean War Vet, USMC.   

  • Gdunn

    take a visit to the nearest marine corps recruiting station, theyll give you info on the marines and just go from there

  • Janice568890

    God Bless You! To Mom, Nick and Pup.  Praying for all of our service men and women all the time.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Beverly-Carlson/1543700241 Beverly Carlson

    I love this Thank You Marines :)

  • Ana Park

    My aunt was in Iraq and afghanistan and her dog Dallas saved her and others’ lives several times, as well as finding enemy soldiers. He was a cave dog. My brother also served as a Marine. In loving memory of Fayette Frahm. Thank you all for your service to our country.

  • Jclements123463

    As an old Sapper from Vietnam (D Co. 86th Combat Engineers) I would have given anything to have had a trained Lab with me.  My 12b30 squad spent 2 years in the Mekong Delta searching for all of booby traps & mines (you now call IED’s)   We just used our old bayonets, metal detectors and fingers back then.  God bless you all and keep those Labs safe.  My two black labs “Star and Thor” only hunt the birds here in Texas, but every morning they are up and ready to go to work.  In mid August when I start cleaning my shotguns for opening day they are turning in circles in full anticipation of the hunt.

  • Jmag

    how do you sign up for the marines 

  • Richards2451

    25 Ieds. My squad alone found 46 when we were in Garmsir. Our battalion found almost 500 ieds. I’m sorry “America’s Battalion” I’m not impressed.

  • Jarhead0316

    mans best friend

  • Guayanillensa

    at least we know that some of our soldiers are no alone that mens best friend always come throu! 

  • Lacarrams4

    Lance Cpl Nick La Carra’s Mom is proud to see her son & pup…missing them!
     

  • ASDFRD

    USMC

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1555124233 Robin Philippi Pierce

    SEMPER FI So proud of all of our young men and women who have given so much to make sure that I sleep in peace at night. Y’all are all my HERO’S.  These pictures of y’all with your faithful companions doing what you do makes me smile. Stay safe and come home soon

  • DAYTHEWEIRDO

    Mans best friend NOO MARINE’S BEST FRIEND

  • http://www.facebook.com/ldferreri LaDonna Ferreri

    RAH!  True DEVIL DOGS <3