From Military.com:
“US Military Working Dogs
Should Be American-Born, Senator Says”
A Democratic lawmaker wants the
Pentagon to buy American when it comes to its Military Working Dog program. Sen.
Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut included an amendment in the 2021 National
Defense Authorization Act that would require the U.S. Air Force, which oversees
the Pentagon's program, to conduct a business case study on what it would take
to purchase dogs from U.S. breeders instead of European sources. "I was
surprised to learn from the Air Force that the vast majority of our working dogs
are actually born and bred in Europe, which raises costs and puts us in
competition with other countries," Blumenthal said in a statement to
Military.com on Wednesday. Bloomberg News was first to report the story. "I
wanted to do what I could to help establish a strong program to breed working
dogs here at home, where we already have an expert training program. Our
provision in this year's NDAA takes the first step toward that goal by
assessing what resources are necessary for the Department of Defense to meet
increasing demands for military working dogs by supporting American
breeders," he said.
The Air Force budgets roughly $5
million annually for the program, buying about 450 dogs each year, according to
service spokeswoman Laura McAndrews. The dogs are trained at the 341st Training
Squadron, an extension of the 37th Training Wing at Joint Base San
Antonio-Lackland, Texas. The 341st, which trains and cares for working dogs in
the DoD and other government agencies, has a separate operational budget of
about $8 million, she said in an email. It costs about $5,500 to buy a dog from
Europe, according to statistics provided by the Air Force. The service pays
about $9,000 per dog in the U.S. The domestic market has slimmed in recent
years, McAndrews said, especially for the type of dogs the Pentagon wants,
including the Belgian Malinois and German Shepherd breeds. "There simply
is no market value to a vendor in operating a breeding program to the capacity
needed to meet the demands of the DoD," she said, adding that these breeds
are readily available in Europe because of "an almost century-old
tradition of breeding, training, selling and competing with trained
police-style working dogs in almost every country of Western and European
Europe." It was not immediately clear whether there are additional costs
to move the dogs across the Atlantic; McAndrews could not provide that
information by press time. "Regardless of procurement location, the cost
to train is approximately $60,000 per dog," she said.
The Pentagon bought 427 working
dogs last year -- 214 from domestic vendors and 213 from overseas. But of the
214 dogs procured domestically, 194 were born in Europe, the service said. Turning
to American breeders may become a necessity in the near term, Blumenthal said,
solely due to demand for the dogs. Blumenthal noted dogs are no longer
considered just "military equipment" and are instrumental in
augmenting troops on the battlefield. "We've made huge strides to protect
and support these heroic animals ... expanding their access to medical care and
making adoption easier," he said. "I also included language in NDAA
to require a new Comptroller General report on the welfare and health of
working dogs across the federal government." Some military working dogs
have even become famous over the years. For example, President Donald Trump
last year awarded an achievement medal to Conan, the Belgian Malinois who
chased Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi into a tunnel before the man
detonated a suicide vest. Similarly, Cairo, also a Belgian Malinois, in 2011
helped secure the perimeter and sniff out bombs around the house where a Navy
SEAL team took out Osama bin Laden, the terror leader behind the 9/11 attacks.
^ In this case I don’t think it
matters if the Military Working Dogs are from the US, Europe or any other
place. ^
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