War Dog of the Week: Tam, the dog who would not leave his handler behind

By Rebecca Frankel
Best Defense Chief Canine Correspondent
Lance Corporal James Wilkinson was a mere two meters away
when a roadside bomb
exploded, sending shrapnel spray into his hip and stomach, severing the
femoral artery in his leg. The blast launched Wilkinson off his feet, and though
he was able to take stock of the severity of his wounds, he blacked out before
he could call for help.
When he came to he found Tam, the yellow Labrador who'd been
his bomb-sniffing partner during their three months in Afghanistan, standing
over him. After the explosion Tam, who had not been injured in the attack, stuck
close by his handler through the billowing black smoke and barked "like mad,"
not only bringing Wilkinson back to consciousness, but also drawing their
fellow soldiers to his aid. They treated him quickly, applying a tourniquet to
his leg and getting him onto the U.S. Black Hawk helicopter that
brought him swiftly to Camp Bastion's military hospital.
The doctors who repaired the extensive damage done to his
hip and leg told Wilkinson, a dog handler with the 104 Military MWD Squadron of
the British Army, that if he'd arrived at the hospital "a minute later he would
be dead." His surgeries lasted an entire day.
Originally from Yorkshire, Wilkinson, 26, is still working
through his recovery. "It is a slow process," he told
reporters, "but I am getting there. I am
walking, which is the main thing. A lot of guys who get caught by IEDs
(improvised explosive devices) end up losing a leg or both."
Unfortunately, his career as a military
dog handler is over. Wilkinson suffered nerve damage in his leg
and still has shrapnel in his body. The Army has classified him as
"non-deployable." His wife Kerry has left the Army and hopes that her husband
will decide to join her in civilian life and return to his former job as a
gamekeeper. They are expecting their first child this summer. But Kerry, who
was also a handler with the 104, knew Tam and saw
the connection between her husband and his canine
partner. "They had a great bond. Jim loved that dog."
There is no questioning the role the dog played in saving
this soldier's life. Of Tam, Wilkinson says, "He was my world. He was a good
companion and I trusted him."
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