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Edwards says goodbye to two military working dogs -- gone but not forgotten
Posted 12/7/2011 Updated 12/7/2011
by Kate Blais
95th Air Base Wing Public Affairs
12/7/2011 - EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. -- He carefully but thoroughly searched an abandoned bunker halfway around the world thought to house insurgent activity. Then taking point in the pursuit of an unidentified enemy, Telin confidently led the squad of troops through a desert trail, following footprints in the dirt.
Telin didn't carry a weapon. He didn't have any specific intelligence on the situation. Nevertheless, he fearlessly executed his task to track. Telin was a Belgian Malinois and military working dog deployed from Edwards to support military operations in the Middle East.
"I trusted him with my life," said Master Sgt. Craig Young, 95th Security Forces Squadron and one of Telin's former handlers. "I learned to read Telin and his behavior, so I had full confidence in him that he'd be able to find anything, and find it before we were in danger."
For dog handlers in the military, military working dogs serve as partners and fellow servicemembers, enduring patrol and even deployment duties with their human counterparts.
Read more:http://www.edwards.**.mil/news/story.asp?storyID=123282343
Posted 12/7/2011 Updated 12/7/2011
by Kate Blais
95th Air Base Wing Public Affairs
12/7/2011 - EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. -- He carefully but thoroughly searched an abandoned bunker halfway around the world thought to house insurgent activity. Then taking point in the pursuit of an unidentified enemy, Telin confidently led the squad of troops through a desert trail, following footprints in the dirt.
Telin didn't carry a weapon. He didn't have any specific intelligence on the situation. Nevertheless, he fearlessly executed his task to track. Telin was a Belgian Malinois and military working dog deployed from Edwards to support military operations in the Middle East.
"I trusted him with my life," said Master Sgt. Craig Young, 95th Security Forces Squadron and one of Telin's former handlers. "I learned to read Telin and his behavior, so I had full confidence in him that he'd be able to find anything, and find it before we were in danger."
For dog handlers in the military, military working dogs serve as partners and fellow servicemembers, enduring patrol and even deployment duties with their human counterparts.
Read more:http://www.edwards.**.mil/news/story.asp?storyID=123282343