Rebecca’s War Dog of the Week: Handler to receive Navy Cross for acts of valor in Afghanistan

By Rebecca Frankel
Best Defense Chief Canine Correspondent
The Marine Corps Times
announced
this week that three Marines and a sailor are to receive commendation for their
service during combat operations in Afghanistan. All four men are being
recognized for the heroics they displayed while attached to the
1st Marine Special Operations Battalion. The Marine being awarded the
Navy Cross, the second highest military decoration for valor, is handler Sgt.
William Sutra. Also reportedly
on that mission was Sutra's explosives detection dog, Posha.
The operation that began on July 10,
2010 quickly went awry when the team was ambushed and caught in the open. They
were then pinned down by "heavy machine gun and small arms fire from multiple
directions." The mission lasted two days, during which time the team's "element
leader was killed by a makeshift bomb blast on the second day ... the survivors
repeatedly braved enemy fire to retrieve him" and continued to hold their
ground until the rest of the team could be evacuated from the area.
According to a spokesman quoted in a
MARSOC press release
about the medal recipients: "Members of the team unhesitatingly took charge,
and with complete disregard for their own lives, moved across open terrain to
reach their commandos' position orienting their fires on the enemy."
I haven't seen mention of
whether or not the dog played a vital role during that two-day mission. But
like Sutra said while the canine team was deployed together in Iraq in 2009, "[Posha]
might not know it, but his job here is to save my life and the lives of others."
That tour in Iraq was the first for Sutra and Posha as an
explosives detection team. Together they
carried out a variety of missions-reconnaissance
operations in Al Qadasiyah, patroling in Diwaniyah, meeting
with a local sheik in Afak. While they were stationed
in Iraq, Posha and Sutra, who hails from Worcester, Massachusetts, were
featured in an article, about handlers and their dogs. Of his
partner, Sutra had this to say:
Me and Posha, I feel like we're the same. I've
worked with four dogs. Posha's been a rough dog to
other [dog handlers] in the past, but I got the opportunity to pick him up
after my last deployment, and we click like I think nobody else has. We fit
well together."
The awards ceremony
is scheduled for Monday where the secretary of the
Navy will present the awards at Camp Pendleton in California.
Rebecca Frankel, on leave from
her FP desk, is currently writing a book about
military working dogs, to be published by Atria Books in September 2013.
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