Attention

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not represent our advertisers

Wednesday, September 03, 2014

MILITARY ABANDONS SOME COMBAT DOGS OVERSEAS

In his USA Today column, Jonah Goldberg exposes a national disgrace I was completely unaware of, one that is almost too heartbreaking to comprehend: the United State military sometimes reclassifies combat dogs as "equipment" and abandons them to languish in shelters overseas in war zones.

Other than the fact that combat dogs save an average of 150 American lives during their service, these living creatures form strong emotional attachments to the men assigned to them. But when their time is up -- when they become too old, combat fatigued or shall-shocked to be useful in combat -- rather than transport them home for adoption, they are sometimes heartlessly abandoned.

Goldberg writes that…
It is one thing to ask these warriors to say goodbye to their dog when it is still on active duty and is assigned a new handler, which often happens. It is quite another to ask them to leave these dogs behind when the dogs are effectively abandoned overseas, left to languish in shelters — or worse. That's why handlers are sometimes forced to make incredible sacrifices to get their four-legged comrades home on their own.
More

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Similar to the way the combat veteran is abandoned when they return home. We do at least bring them home to languish in long wait times, lost paperwork, "no you didn't get that there" situations.

Anonymous said...

You can tell a lot about a man/woman by the way in which he/she treats her dog.