"Before, they used to use car bombs. Now they are using people and
animals," said Col. Adnan Jaboori, a spokesman for the interior
minister. "They are finding new ways to use remote-control technology."

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/iraq/la-fg-dogs10aug10,0,2727461.story?coll=la-home-headlines
THE WORLD
Servants -- and Weapons -- of War
U.S. forces rely on dogs to detect bombs in Iraq. Insurgents rig them
with explosives.
By Borzou Daragahi
Times Staff Writer

August 10, 2005

BAGHDAD — These are the dogs of war.

At a checkpoint leading to the U.S.-protected Green Zone, Gordy stands
sentry. The affable Belgian Malinois has a nose finely tuned to detect
the nitrates, plastic explosives, gunpowder and detonation cords that
suicide bombers use to blow up people.

On a barren stretch of road in northern Iraq, a dog rigged with
explosives approaches a group of Iraqi police officers. Detonated by
remote control, the bomb tears the dog apart but doesn't harm the cops.

In a war where the line between civilian and soldier is blurred, even
man's best friend has been caught up in the combat. U.S. forces hail
their trained dogs as heroes, but to insurgents, canines provide the
means for a more sinister goal.

Iraqi police cite the recent use of dogs rigged with explosive devices
in Latifiya, just south of Baghdad, in Baqubah in central Iraq and in
and around the northern city of Kirkuk.

Some Iraqis are horrified by the ethics of dragging the animal world
into a human conflict.

"How can they use these lovely pets for criminal and murderous acts?"
asked Rasha Khairir, 25, an employee of a Baghdad stock brokerage. "A
poor dog can't refuse what they are doing with him because he can't
think and decide."

Despite a common prejudice in the Muslim world against dogs, which are
considered unclean, even the most virulent clerical opponents of the
U.S. presence in Iraq have decried the use of canines as proxies in
the war.

Abdel Salam Kubaisi, a spokesman for the Muslim Scholars Assn., a
hard-line Sunni Arab clerical organization sympathetic to insurgents,
called the practice un-Islamic. "Our religion does not permit us to
hurt animals," he said, "neither by using them as explosive devices
nor in any other manner."

U.S. troops extol the virtues of their canine allies in the war
against the insurgents.

"Dogs are vital in Iraqi counterinsurgency efforts," said Staff Sgt.
Ann Pitt, 35, of Buffalo, N.Y., a U.S. Army dog handler based near the
southern city of Nasiriya.

"We have many items to help us do our mission, but I don't think we
have a better detection tool than a dog," said Pitt, who cares for
Buddy, another Belgian Malinois, a dog similar to a German shepherd.
"These dogs are amazing. They are more dependable and effective than
almost anything we have available to us."

The Army has deployed dogs since World War I to locate trip wires,
track enemies, stand guard at base perimeters and search tunnels for
explosives or booby traps.

Even these dogs weren't always treated kindly. Of 4,300 dogs sent to
Vietnam, 2,000 were handed over to the South Vietnamese army and 2,000
were put to sleep. Only 200 managed to make it home, said Ron Aiello,
Vietnam War-era dog handler who runs U.S. War Dog, a 1,100-member
Burlington, N.J., organization.

His group set up a website, http://www.uswardogs.org , to raise funds
for a memorial to honor the dogs and their handlers.

In Iraq, dogs like Gordy and Buddy are posted at checkpoints and at
entrances to government buildings.

They sniff for explosives among reporters' equipment at news
conferences and passengers' bags at Baghdad's international airport.

"What we do is prevent people from getting killed," said Artwell
Chibero, Gordy's 29-year-old Zimbabwean handler, an employee of a
private security firm hired by the Defense Department.

Dogs have 25 times more smell receptors than humans, Pitt said.

"We smell spaghetti sauce and we think, 'Oh, the spaghetti sauce
smells good,' " Pitt said. "To a dog, they would smell the tomatoes,
the onions, the basil, oregano. They smell all the odors individually."

Insurgents have long stuffed roadside bombs into the carcasses of
animals. But Iraqi security officials say they increasingly worry
about the use of live animals.

"Dogs have been used in many areas by insurgents throughout Iraq" to
carry explosive devices, said Noori Noori, inspector-general at the
Interior Ministry. "They used mentally retarded people for operations
during the elections, so why wouldn't they use animals?"

Last year in Ramadi, in the vast desert west of the capital,
insurgents dispatched a booby-trapped donkey toward a U.S.-run
checkpoint around sunset. "As one of the soldiers tried to stop it,
the donkey exploded," said resident Mohammed Yas, 45. The only
casualty was the donkey.

"Before, they used to use car bombs. Now they are using people and
animals," said Col. Adnan Jaboori, a spokesman for the interior
minister. "They are finding new ways to use remote-control technology."

The daily newspaper Al Mada recently published an editorial cartoon
showing an insurgent who strongly resembled Saddam Hussein trying to
persuade a dog to strap on a belt bomb to advance the cause of the
Baath Party, which once ruled Iraq.

"It is such a simple task," the insurgent tells the terrified dog.
"All you have to do is to put on this explosives belt, repeat the
party's slogans, and may Allah have mercy on your father's soul!"

Times staff writers Zainab Hussein and Suhail Ahmad contributed to
this report.





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