
Notes: These notes will eventually be contained in a new folder called VIETNAM0. By the way, VIET-NAM was a correct spelling in most of the media in 1963. Read "Vietnam Diary" by Richard Tregaskis (November 28, 1916 – August 15, 1973). According to his book, over 6000 body bags were counted in a few months on the Tan Son Nhut military landing field in Saigon when we only had 22,000 troops in Viet-nam. Only a small number (less than a humdred) of causulties were reported as dead on the second page of most newspapers. But I digress. For now, these notes are the lead-in to the CNN story that jolted my memory. I will always be thankful to CNN for this kick-start. I am a draftee whose education was interrupted by the draft when I was working to earn enough money to continue my education. I was hurded aboard a PAN AMERICAN jet on the day that the President was killed. I arrived in Viet-nam after stopping in Hawaii, Guam, and Manila. I learned that there were almost no cats or dogs in Viet-nam because the Vietnamese had eated most of them. Also, they made monkey-ball soup by stripping the meat from monkeys. Therefore, very few monkeys as well.
Sometime later I learned that 500 trained German Shepard dogs had been delivered to a compound near Danang to hunt down VC. The cost of training was estimated at $10,000 each. The punch-line is that at the end of 30 days all of the dogs were gone because they were stolen for lunch and dinner. How many of my readers have had a $10,000 meal made with dog meat? End of Notes.
By Jessica Ravitz, CNN 02/13/2010
STORY HIGHLIGHTS

(CNN) -- Maybe it was the sound of the wind cutting through the wire. Perhaps he caught a small vibration with his keen
eyes. Or it could have been a slight difference in the air's smell.
Whatever it was, when Sarge noticed that his Marine Corps handler, Fred Dorr, was creeping down the wrong path in the
Vietnam jungle, the German shepherd did something he'd never done out in the field: He looked at Dorr and barked, before
taking a seat.
"When he sat down, I knew there was a trip wire. I was one step away from it," remembered Dorr, who with his dog in 1969
was "walking point," leading the way for a dozen soldiers. Had the hidden explosive device been tripped, "It would have
gotten half of us."
More than 40 years later, the gratitude and love Dorr, 59, feels for the dog he served with is as strong as ever. And it's for this
reason that Dorr, president of the Vietnam Dog Handler Association, drove from his Yoakum, Texas, home to be in Southern
California this week.
About 200 Vietnam War dog handlers, who were trained to read and communicate with their canine partners, have gathered
for a reunion. And on Saturday they'll join an expected several thousand others for the 10th anniversary rededication of the
War Dog Memorial at the March Air Reserve Base in Riverside.
During the Vietnam War, more than 4,000 dogs served in various positions, said Michael Lemish, a military dog historian and
author of "Forever Forward: K-9 Operations in Vietnam."
The scout dogs, such as Sarge, walked with their handlers ahead of patrols -- making them the first target for ambushes or
hidden explosives. There were also sentry dogs who guarded bases, tracker dogs who followed the trail of enemies and mine
and booby trap dogs who sniffed out dangers hidden beneath the ground.
The Viet Cong placed a bounty on the dogs because they were so effective, Lemish said. All told, he estimated the K-9 teams
averted more than 10,000 casualties. But at the end of the war, only about 200 dogs came home. The rest who had survived
were either euthanized or turned over to the South Vietnamese -- left behind, a surplus of war.
"They were treated as obsolete equipment. And if you were a handler, you couldn't see them that way," said Jack Kowall, 61,
who keeps a framed picture of himself and Eric, the black lab and shepherd mix he worked with, atop his desk in Marietta,
Georgia. "When that's your dog, that's your dog. He sees you in danger, he's going to respond. Unconditional love -- it's all for
you. You can't help but love him."

On patrols, Kowall used hand motions to speak to Eric. In turn, the animal spoke back through his movements. His ears
would shoot up and turn in the direction of suspicious noise. The hair on his back would stand up if danger was close. If he
wanted Kowall to stop moving, he'd look back at him.

Off-duty, Eric was playful. He liked to have his neck scratched and would roll around on the ground. The 110-pound dog
would cuddle up to Kowall at night when they were out in the field, and he'd eat out of his handler's helmet. Whenever Kowall
could, he'd give his closest friend steak.

The men who'd walk behind the pair on missions were always different. But a scout handler and his dog were a constant, as
the duo bounced between different assignments.
When Jeffrey Bennett, founder and former CEO of Nature's Recipe pet foods, first learned about the dogs who'd served and
the fate of so many of them, he set out to teach others. Based on about three years of research, he co-produced the
documentary "War Dogs: America's Forgotten Heroes," which first aired 11 years ago on the Discovery Channel.
Donations earned through this film allowed Bennett, now president of the War Dog Memorial, to commission three
monuments, sculptures featuring a German shepherd and his handler.
The first one was unveiled at the March Field Air Museum in Riverside. A second was installed at Fort Benning, Georgia. The
third remains in storage, Bennett said. The original goal to place it in Washington beside the Vietnam Veterans Memorial or at
Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia remains an elusive dream.
Dogs have long served with the U.S. military, said Lemish, who also wrote "War Dogs: A History of Loyalty and Heroism."
During World War I, the dogs borrowed from the French and British worked as messengers and assisted the Red Cross by
finding the wounded on battlefields, he said. The American K-9 corps, Lemish said, really began during World War II, when,
among other tasks, thousands of dogs donated by civilians patrolled shorelines.
Back then, dogs sent abroad were retrained and returned to civilian life, but that practice had changed by the time U.S. forces
entered Vietnam, Lemish said. Later, galvanized by the attention earned through the documentary, Vietnam War dog
handlers began to call for change.
Johnny Mayo, 60, hadn't spoken to another dog handler in 30 years when he showed up in Washington for his first reunion in
2000. But as he talked to the 250 others in attendance, he realized the power of what they shared.
"You go through the war, and you always remember the bond you have, the bond with the dog," said Mayo, whose dog Kelly
once yanked him up a bank from a rice paddy, out of the way of mortar fire. "On that first trip to the [Vietnam Veterans
Memorial] wall, it was a reunion with the spirits of our dogs."
Later, Mayo, of Lexington, South Carolina, would go on to write his own book and establish a traveling exhibit to pay tribute to
the dogs who'd served.
Washington also took notice. In November 2000, President Clinton signed into law legislation that established a military
working dog adoption program. Now the dogs working in Iraq and Afghanistan will have a chance to find comfortable homes
when they return from war.
For Dorr, of the Vietnam Dog Handler Association, this has been a blessing. He said leaving his partner Sarge behind, all
those decades ago, haunted him.
"A lot of us [handlers] suffered PTSD," he said, referring to post-traumatic stress disorder. "It's like leaving your kid back
there."
But he now has Bluma, the war dog he adopted from Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio, Texas. The German shepherd,
who has hip problems, looks uncannily like Sarge, he said, and having him around is a source of comfort.
"I'm taking care of an old vet," Dorr said, "and he's taking care of me."

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