Hill kennel master stands up kennel and other programs

  • Published
  • By Lee Anne Hensley
  • Hilltop Times staff
When Tech. Sgt. Joseph Throgmorton volunteered for a kennel master job at
Joint Base Balad, Iraq, several months ago, he had no idea it would be what
he describes as "probably the most complicated and the most stressful job
I've had in my 13-and-a-half years (of service)."

The kennel master from the 75th Security Forces Squadron Military Working
Dog Unit here did not know what his mission would be until he arrived at JBB
last January. When Throgmorton arrived there with his dog teams, he quickly
learned there were several missions, and the largest of those missions would
be to stand up a kennel for the 332nd Expeditionary Security Forces
Squadron.

"When I got there, I realized we were starting from scratch," Throgmorton
said. "We were the first Air Force dog teams to be assigned to Joint Base
Balad."

The joint forces base had an existing kennel operated by the Army military
working dog units and the original plan was to build an extension to that
kennel for the 332nd ESFS to operate from.

"Even though there was already an Army kennel established on the base, since
our security forces group handled security on the base both inside and out,
they saw a need to have dogs with the (Air Force) patrols and to minimize
threats to the other squads patrolling outside (the perimeter) of the base,"
Throgmorton said. "They were originally planning to spend more money
extending on to the existing Army kennel, but when I got there I gave them
this idea which was a much cheaper option."

Throgmorton proposed to build a separate kennel and training area for the
332nd ESFS MWD unit out of existing unused structures and members of his
squadron helped with some of the building and assembling of the kennels.
They erected a fence around the kennel area to have a training area, which
was quickly utilized by the teams.

"Once we realized that we would be doing outside the wire missions and
leading patrols, within the first two weeks we spent morning, day and night
training with buried ordnance and getting the dogs used to working long
hours," Throgmorton said.

"The handlers there stayed extremely busy," he said. When they were not
assisting with the stand up of the new kennels, the dog teams had their
primary missions to focus on.

"There were two squadrons under our group and it was our job to provide dogs
to both squadrons, whether it be to the 332nd Expeditionary Security Forces
Squadron to provide counternarcotics or explosive detection or to the 532nd
Expeditionary Security Forces Squadron who would provide outside-the-wire
activities like finding weapons caches and things like that," Throgmorton
said. "One day they could be working for the 332nd and work a 12 hour shift
and the next day they could be attached to the 532nd and be attached to a
mission outside the wire."

When the dog teams had the occasional break, work would still follow them
home.

As there were not operational kennels for the dogs to stay in when they were
not working in the field, the dogs stayed with their handlers in their
security housing units. The handlers had to take their dogs with them
everywhere and when the handler wanted to eat at the chow hall, he either
had to place the dog in a portable kennel in his room and hope the dog did
not disturb his next-door-neighbor, or he had to ask another handler to
"babysit" for him. The handlers were also responsible for exercising their
dogs and maintaining the dog's strict training routine, even on the
handler's day off, as well as assisting the dog with answering nature's call
regardless of the handler's convenience.

"The first couple of months were trying because he was still a young pup and
we were both getting used to the deployment," said Staff Sgt. Meredith
Clement, 75th SFS MWD handler, who spent the last six months with her dog,
Basco, at JBB. "But now it is hard for me to be away from him. Last night
was the first night I have been away from him since January, and it was a
little rough."

Clement said the upside to spending 24 hours a day with her dog helped her
to understand Basco's traits and personalities, but she and Throgmorton
still see the overarching advantages to keeping the dogs in a centralized
kennel.

"It is easier to oversee all dogs if they are in one place and keeping a
healthy living environment for them," Throgmorton said. "However, the
handlers did a good job taking care of the dogs and everything worked out
really well. Also, having the dogs living with the handlers made it easier
to send the team out on a mission because the handler would already be with
the dog."

The kennels were scheduled to open before Clement returned to Hill Air Force
Base, but she reports that plumbing and electrical issues barred the timely
operation of the kennels before her return. Throgmorton believes the issues
will be resolved and the kennels will be opened shortly, and they will
remain in operation until the closure of JBB.

Throgmorton's team was also involved in starting two other missions at JBB:
assisting the U.S. Customs Service with detecting outbound cargo for weapons
and narcotics in order to expedite the customs process for returning
military members, and starting the animal-assisted medical therapy project
called the K-9 Visitation Program at the base's Air Force Theater Hospital.

The latter program began mid-May at the AFTH and was scheduled to perform
rehabilitative visits to the hospital twice per month, depending upon the
handler's schedule. The program also involved giving the hospital's medical
staff a K-9 demonstration to educate them about the security force's
mission. Likewise, the 332nd ESFS team shadowed the medical staff to
understand their mission and see their common goals in the AOR.

The Air Force MWDs helped with many morale activities on base, including
providing K-9 demonstrations for more than 500 people in celebration of
National Police Week 2009 held in May. "For the first time at Balad, we
celebrated Police Week and we provided the K-9 demonstrations," Clement
said.

Clement and Basco also assisted in the U.S. Customs search and reported zero
findings during their deployment.

"It was good all around that we did not have any finds," Clement said, as it
demonstrated a level of compliance by their fellow military members.

The 332nd ESFS dog teams had many missions, and that was primarily due to
the great need the base had for the military working dogs, Throgmorton said.

"A lot of the dog teams there put forth great effort while deployed there,"
he said. "They would work back-to-back missions and never complain because
they knew they were making a great impact."

Although this was the most challenging project thus far in Throgmorton's
career, he said it was also the most rewarding.

"I had handlers knock on my door at night telling me they found a weapons
cache or mortar, and one mortar found is one less mortar that would be used
against us," he said.

During his deployment, Throgmorton's dog teams found eight weapons caches
and two improvised explosive devices before they had a chance to detonate.