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Mike Ritland - Navy SEAL Dogs. My Tale of Training Canines for Combat

Here you can read online Mike Ritland - Navy SEAL Dogs. My Tale of Training Canines for Combat full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. year: 2013, publisher: Macmillan Publishers;St. Martins Press;St. Martins Griffin, genre: Detective and thriller. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

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Navy SEAL Dogs. My Tale of Training Canines for Combat: summary, description and annotation

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Trident K9 Warriors gave readers an inside look at the SEAL teams elite K9 warriorswho they are, how they are trained, and the extreme missions they undertake to save lives. From detecting explosives to eliminating the bad guys, these powerful dogs are also some of the smartest and highest skilled working animals on the planet. Mike Ritlands job is to train them.

This special edition re-telling presents the dramatic tale of how Ritland discovered his passion and grew up to become the trainer of the nations most elite military working dogs. Ritland was a smaller-than-average kid who was often picked-on at schoolwhich led him to spend more time with dogs at a young age. After graduating BUD/S trainingthe toughest military training in the worldto become a SEAL, he was on combat deployment in Iraq when he saw a military working dog in action and instantly knew hed found his true calling.

Ritland started his own company to...

Mike Ritland: author's other books


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The author and publisher have provided this e-book to you for your personal use - photo 1

The author and publisher have provided this e-book to you for your personal use - photo 2

The author and publisher have provided this e-book to you for your personal use only. You may not make this e-book publicly available in any way. Copyright infringement is against the law. If you believe the copy of this e-book you are reading infringes on the authors copyright, please notify the publisher at: us.macmillanusa.com/piracy.

This book is dedicated to the brotherhood, and the loyal hounds that help keep them safe.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

I would like to thank the following people, for without them this book would not have been possible.

My parents, George and SandyThank you for putting up with me as a kid and instilling the values and foundation that forged me into the man I am today.

The SEAL TeamsEnlisting at eighteen, I grew up in the teams. There could not have been a finer collection of warriors to be around to set the example of how to live your life. The entire country owes you an infinite debt of gratitude for the violence you bestow on our enemies.

Marc Resnick, his assistant Kate Canfield, and everyone at St. Martins PressThank you for your professionalism and pride in what you do. Its been a pleasure working with you.

Gary BrozekThank you for the countless hours of hard work you have put into this project, bringing my words to life in a way that couldnt make me prouder.

Brandon WebbThe brotherhood continues to prove that it takes care of its own, and your friendship and advice are certainly no exception. Thank you for everything, brother.

Wayne DodgeBrother, there are no words to give ample thanks for what you have done for me, in more ways than one. Your friendship will be forever appreciated.

The warriors (both men and dogs) at MPC-1 (Multi-Purpose Cammo)You guys are the reason I do what I do, and I could not be prouder of the job you guys have done and continue to do.

Special thanks to:

The Allon Family

CP

Happy

SA

Fro

Cinnamon Bear

BC

Johnny D

Mike Mike

Mrs. Toad

Wimbo

Mike Suttle

DK

Matt Betts

Shrek

Darryl Richey

Del

Trey Straub

Echy

KNPV

Dusty

CONTENTS

PART I:

PART II:

PART III:

PART IV:

AUTHORS NOTE

Im a very lucky man in lots of ways. A lot of men and women havent returned from our recent wars. I was able to. Now, I combine two passions of mineworking with dogs and still aiding in the defense of our country.

I love dogs as pets and companions. I admire them as workers and useful tools, and also know how much they benefit from our training and guidance. I feel sorry for anyone who hasnt experienced the joys of seeing a dog in action doing what nature intended or even just the look in a dogs eyes when you scratch that spot for him or her. I appreciate all sides of the dog-human interaction enough that Ive chosen to make training military and other working dogs my career, while still sharing my life with dogs as pets.

Multipurpose K-9s have saved countless lives. As a nation, we owe them a tremendous debt of gratitude. By telling the story of some of these dogs, I hope to increase awareness of the vital role that military working dogs play. By sharing some of my own story and the stories of some of the Navy SEAL dog handlers Ive come to know, I hope to encourage you to believe in yourself and your own dreams, and to keep working toward your goals, because you never know how far you can gountil one day, you realize youre there, exactly where you want to be.

PROLOGUE Northeast Afghanistan 2007 The tense silence inside the airborne - photo 3

PROLOGUE Northeast Afghanistan 2007 The tense silence inside the airborne - photo 4

PROLOGUE

Northeast Afghanistan, 2007

The tense silence inside the airborne MH-60 Seahawk helicopter was broken only by the sound of the aircrafts rotors and blades beating like a quickened pulse. Inside, sixteen members of a West Coastbased U.S. Navy SEAL team waited to reach the site of their mission in Northeast Afghanistan. The team was based at a forward operating base (FOB) in Afghanistan, close to the Pakistan border in a mountainous region called the Hindu Kush. In military circles, the Kush is well-known for being an area Taliban terrorists use to travel undetected across the border that divides Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Just a few hours earlier, in a premission briefing, the team had learned the nature of their mission. The operations order commanded them to take out a high-value target deemed essential to the Taliban. The target was located in a village about 30 miles (50 kilometers) away. According to the intelligence report, the target was a leading Taliban munitions expert and one of the head trainers who instructed terrorist cell leaders and their underlings in the deadly craft of making improvised explosive devices (IEDs).

As the MH-60 neared the landing zone, everyone on the team felt a collective sense of heightened anticipation. Everyone, including Chopper, the canine member of the team. From his seat between the knees of his handler, a SEAL named Brett, Choppers chest rose and fell at a slightly agitated rate in response to the mens eagerness. The men were about to rappel out of the plane into the pitch-black night and into enemy territory, and Chopper was going with them. They all had a job to do.

The copilot radioed that they were several klicks (kilometers), or a few miles, from the landing zone. In their briefing, they had learned that there was no landing zone in range large enough or flat enough to accommodate the three helicopters that were on this mission. So they would have to fast-rope inliterally slide down a rope to the ground.

Brett stood and commanded Chopper to do the same. Then Brett turned his back and waited. The platoon chief stepped forward, squatted in front of Chopper, wrapped his arms around the dogs rear end and chest, and lifted him up. Chopper remained alert but still and remained that way when he was strapped into a harness on Bretts back.

Brett felt a thwack on his shoulder, a signal that he and Chopper were safely joined together and good to go. Brett spent the next few minutes making his way to the front of the line. He checked the rigging and stepped out of the MH-60s bay and into the dark night air. The dog on his back remained silent. The only sounds were the wind rushing past Bretts ears and the high-pitched whirring of the rope snaking through the device.

Brett and Chopper touched down, and Brett unhooked the line and waited for another team member to release Chopper. He then grabbed the dogs lead, double-checked the harness, and proceeded to the head of the formation. Behind him, the other men moved out of their defensive perimeter position to follow Brett and Chopper, all of them careful to maintain their spacing discipline.

Choppers years of training and experience, coupled with his honed instincts that had been held at bay during the flight, were now working full force. Steadily moving at a pace between a lope and a trot, with his broad snout alternately pointed to the ground and lifted above his shoulder to pick up any target odor, Chopper worked along a snakelike path. He was a trained expert at sniffing out explosives and was positioned at the head of the line to detect any IEDs or munitions caches. With his nose guiding him and the platoon, Chopper led the way forward.

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