Engage

Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Facebook
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Facebook
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Twitter
Logo
Facebook
Logo
Facebook
Logo
Facebook
Logo
Facebook
Logo
Facebook
Logo
Facebook
Logo
Facebook
Logo
Facebook
Logo
Facebook
Logo
Facebook
Logo
Facebook
Logo
Facebook
Logo
Facebook
2,604,277
Like Us
Twitter
763,290
Follow Us
YouTube Blog RSS Instagram Flickr

News Search

FILTER:
military working dog
Clear

News Comments Updated
1 2
Staff Sgt. Brian Williams receives Carly, his newly adopted Military Working Dog Aug. 28, 2013, on Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst, N.J. Williams trained and was also deployed with Carly in Kandahar, Afghanistan, where Williams sustained injuries when a roadside bomb detonated. During his recovery at Walter Reed National Medical Center, Md., Carly was brought to visit. Williams request was to adopt Carly which recently was approved. Williams is a MWD handler assigned to the 87th Security Forces Squadron. (U.S. Air Force photo/Russ Meseroll)
  

Wounded warrior adopts four-legged partner, friend
From the moment Staff Sgt. Brian Williams arrived at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center to begin his recovery, he had only one request. Carly. Williams was deployed from the 87th Security Forces Squadron when he sustained serious injuries after an roadside bomb detonated while he was on a mission April 25, 2012, outside Kandahar Airfield
0 9/10
2013
Pepper, a 9-year-old retired Military Working Dog, stands on alert with his owner, Tech. Sgt. Chris Smith at Travis Air Force Base, Calif. Pepper retired after a training injury resulted in a leg amputation. Smith was his handler at the time and adopted Pepper after the surgery. Smith is a kennel master assigned to the 60th Security Forces Squadron. (U.S. Air Force photo/Senior Airman Madelyn Brown) Dog's best friend
As Pepper leapt over a 5-foot fence to catch up with a "bad guy," his left hind paw was caught in one of the chain links. As the rest of his body catapulted forward, his paw remained snagged in the fence. When he freed his paw out from the fence, his leg hung distorted and lifeless. His handler knew something was terribly wrong with the K-9.
10 8/12
2013
1 2
RSS