Photos Pictures of Dogs in the Military & Police (K9)

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A soldier of the French Foreign Legion holding his dog Fritz, his battalion mascot, at Bir Hakeim. Fritz ‘moved over to the other side’ and joined the battalion in Narvik in 1940 and stayed with them ever since.

Photograph taken around the time of the Battle of Bir Hakeim, 12 June 1942.
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Another Fritz:
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".......
Fritz was captured a German military Pyrenean Mountain Dog who was captured by Captain Cecil Thomas DSO and his platoon during the D Day Landings on 6th June 1944. He weighed about 122 lbs (55½kg) and his handlers had been killed or captured during the D Day Landings. He was sent back to England where he was nearly destroyed under Britain’s tough quarantine regulations. He was saved from this fate by Leading Wren Elgar who paid the quarantine fees which saved his life. Upon hearing this news, Captain Thomas, who was wounded during the Landings, appealed to the Regiment to raise the £18 (over £700 today!) to repay Miss Elgar and buy Fritz as a Regimental Mascot.

Initially, Fritz was a very reluctant recruit. He caused considerable damage to his kennels by tearing through a corrugated iron fence and chewing through his zinc-lined kennel door all in an effort to escape. However, due to his good training as an attack dog he was soon obeying his new owners despite them not speaking German.

After this rocky start, Fritz served the Regiment faithfully as its mascot for 5 years; heading up Freedom Parades, charming the Royal Family during a Royal visit to Winchester in 1946 and even accompanying the Regiment on days out to the New Forest. The Regiment took great pride in their mascot, and in true military fashion issued him with an official uniform so that he could impress at the head of every parade. Fritz died in 1949, but he has been fondly remembered ever since by The Royal Hampshire Regiment."
 
2007. Australian Army Corporal Graham Ellis and Explosive Detection Dog (EDD) Digger at the Kala Kalah checkpoint construction site in Uruzgan Province.
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2012. Australian Army Sapper Joseph McGee, Lance Corporal Shaun Laing, and EDD Amber of Mentoring Task Force 4 (MTF-4), on patrol in the Char Chineh Valley, Uruzgan Province.
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Belgian Malinois in service with Indian Forces are always busy.
Troops of 53rd Battalion Indo-Tibetan Border Police found twin pipe based Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) (10 KG each) near Kohkameta Weekly Market Place, Narayanpur, Chhattisgarh. The IEDs were safely neutralized later.
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‘A true four-legged warrior’: Police hail elite unit dog killed in West Bank raid​

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A dog belonging to the elite Yamam counterterrorism police unit was killed by Palestinian terrorists during a gunbattle in the West Bank city of Nablus on Tuesday morning, Israel Police said.

During the raid, three Palestinian gunmen were killed, including a wanted terrorist who was responsible for several shooting attacks against Israeli soldiers and civilians in the West Bank, according to the military.

The 9-year-old Belgian Malinois, Zili, was sent into the home which troops had surrounded in the Nablus Old City, but was killed. The canine’s corpse was later retrieved by troops, and will be buried at a military dog cemetery.

More: https://www.timesofisrael.com/a-tru...hail-elite-unit-dog-killed-in-west-bank-raid/
 

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