From Military.com:
The furriest members of the armed
forces will grace the U.S. Postal Service’s newest stamps to be released
Thursday. The new red, white and blue stamps featuring military working dogs
were designed to “honor the nation’s brave and loyal canines,” according to a
Postal Service statement released last week. The stamps will feature artist
renderings of four breeds commonly used as military working dogs: German shepherd,
Dutch shepherd, Labrador retriever and Belgian Malinois, according to an image
of the stamps. In four different stamps, each breed is pictured wearing a
working harness, posing against a backdrop of a white star against a red or
blue background, according to the image. Petty Officer 2nd Class Michael
DeCarli, a master-at-arms at Yokosuka Naval Base, Japan, said he plans to
purchase a stamp and feels honored to have his profession featured on the
classic icon. DeCarli, of Evansville, Ind., deployed last year to Qatar and
Syria with his military working dog, Adam. DeCarli and the 6-year-old German
shepherd worked to detect explosives and went on patrols in the two countries
from April to December 2018. “Postage stamps for a long time have been a
collector’s item featuring important people and events,” Decarli said. “To be
considered in that, I feel very honored as part of the [dog-handler]
community.” The U.S. has used military working dogs alongside servicemembers
since World War I for multiple purposes, including explosives and narcotics
detection, search and rescue and security, according to the U.S. War Dogs
Association. Their senses of smell and sight “are literally superhuman,”
allowing dogs to do what servicemembers alone could not, according to the War
Dogs Association. Chief Petty Officer Autumn NoRunnerHerron, a master-at-arms
and regional kennel master for Navy Region Japan, said in an email to Stars and
Stripes that the stamps will build awareness among civilians, “helping them
understand the contribution of the 1 percent that serve and the smaller
percentage of those who earn the title of K9. “The military working dog is born
into service without anyone asking them if they wish to serve,” NoRunnerHerron
said. “Even with this fact of involuntary service, the military working dog is
still the bravest and most dependable of warriors on the battlefield and at
home.” The military working dog stamps will be issued as “forever” stamps,
meaning they “will always be equal in value to the current First-Class Mail
1-ounce price,” according to the Post Office statement. Postage rates are 55
cents per stamp.
^ It’s important to remember that
it is not only men and women who risk everything so that America and the world
can be safe, but also animals (especially dogs.) Dogs have been used by the US
Military almost since it was first created and even today dogs are sent to
warzones where they are wounded or even killed. They deserve the same respect from
every American that a human solider also deserves. ^
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