I dated a girl in high school who's dad was a k9 officer. He also was the founder of a working dog foundation and trained dogs for many agencies. He brought me training with them one day and had me wear the suit and the arm thing. I think he was trying to scare me off, but I loved it. Used to train with them all the time. It was a lot of fun
Did you stay with that girl ? She seems to have an awesome dad. My father-in-law is the total opposite, he his the weakest man I ever met, I offered many many times to perform tasks for him or begged him to test my capability and he never ever took the opportunity, his say was "my daughter does what she want, you don't need my approval" it totally unsettled me since I come from a very different social background (super wealthy white & conservative while she is from white, liberal and blue-collar background).
One of my biggest regrets was not realizing this was an option when I joined the Air Force. I've had Malinois for decades now and I can't imagine getting paid to work with them every day, it would have easily resulted in me doing a full 20 years.
You probably wouldn't have made it through the selection process for this unless you think you could finish somewhere near the absolute top of your class in various combat arms qualification.
@@janegoodall1837 Raised by a SWAT officer whose best friend was a Recon Marine, firearm proficiency would have been the least of my issues in this regard.
@@ChaseBond11 I think it is about their intensity, they are so energetic and sensitive that if trained properly they could become absolute machines. They are also less likely to have medical conditions.
I became a Military Working Dog Handler (Security Police K9) back in 1975. We were issued dogs that were already trained. The dogs actually trained the students back then. The instructors did tell us what to do but the dogs led us through it for 12 weeks. Longer if you went drug or bomb school. That was a very rewarding part of my life!
My brother was a US Federal Police his German Shepherd was named "Tonka" he served 8 years protecting president Bush & Obama. One of the few times they were at home from traveling he got out of his compound and instead of running up and down the street like a untrained dog he went to my brothers front porch and started guarding the house. His neighbor was afraid to come out of her house. She called my brother and told him Tonka was loose and on his porch. RIP Tonka he was really a beauty and a top soldier. He retired and passed away at 14 yrs old.
@@dudedog7914 Geez. I'm a 50 yr old man who was reflecting on memorial day about the 125 years of military service my family dedicated to this country. My brother served 20 yrs in the Navy and became a US police after his service. Tonka his dog was a beloved member of our family. I just saw this video that reminded of him. What a idiot. Lol
I have a Belgian Malinois whose been through some specified training. This is what they are bred to do. They are absolutely magnificent animals. I love my Maligator
I had one too. We picked him off of the streets of Spain. He would probably have been euthanised. He a had a great rest of his life until the ripe old age of 15. Would never want any other dog than a Mali.
@@JustMe-12345 I disagree that Malinois may not be exactly the right fit for everyone as a therapy dog. They are and have strived as therapy dogs and personally have experience with mals as psd’s, specifically diabetic alert dogs, companions for human’s with ptsd and people with developmental disabilities. I also know that Belgian Malinois are in service as epilepsy warning dogs.
Stop teaching them the aggresive way to socialize , its not normal, even in wildlife they're not socialize to be in aggresion between tbeir hierarchy but more to protect and avert danger instead. Why human legalize and justify their manipulation of exploitation towards inferior canine cub as "teaching" Its inhuman
I work there as a caretaker for these dogs. We care for and handle these dogs for multiple reasons, so they are like family to us. The trainers, military handlers, and vet staff all do amazing work and are very dedicated. Being able to care for them and seeing them progress is always so rewarding. I also got to adopt a retired MWD and they can definitely make great family members too
That's some good work you all do. Something I've wondered for a while is if animals are able to feel pride for the work they do and in their service. Do you think they do?
@@actualteddybear891 I don’t think they can feel what we consider pride for service, but they can surely take pride in being praised/rewarded for doing work. Work is like play to many of them.
Hey, Do you think for male and female dogs for this program they are typically not neutered/spayed as it relates to the personality and energy drive for working that's required of the dogs? I noticed at least 2 male dogs were intact.
Completely genuine question for you, no disrespect whatsoever, but I've been volunteering with shelters for 15 years or so and the sheer number of young GSD that are euthanized every day is mind blowing. Are rescues ever used for these military jobs? The majority of them are surrendered because people buy them as pups and expect them to be couch potatoes, when in reality they have that strong drive to work and please. Just something I've been curious about for a while now. 🐕🦺🐾
Interesting. Normally I don't mind any narrations but when this clip started I thought 'ah the deliberate sounding American TV voice' (Which I find kinda annoying due to its use as an over-dramatistion tool in other shows. They don't over-dramatise in this though).
I’ve had the privilege of talking to a K9 handler from the Singapore Army Military Police formation. I found it really interesting that despite all the differences between military and civilian dogs, there’s a lot of similarity in terms of training and conditioning. I found it quite ironic that their dogs are trained to be aggressive and territorial while those are exactly the opposite behaviors I trained my dog on. He’d be working as a therapy dog soon which is the polar opposite of a MWD. Still, they’re both dogs who love attention, playtimes and treats
Prey drive is assessed very early on and begins before birth in working dog breeding programs. Natural behavior’s are reinforced throughout their career but explains why breeds are specifically used for certain work.
@@2K9s I mean, I trained mine to protect my mom, and care for her. His prey drive is more of a THIS IS MY TERRITORY, and GIMME CUDDLES. I think he’s lost his marbles though because he only seems to go after people And other dogs, specifically if they’re being hostile to my family. My parents have caught him chasing burglars just for shits and giggles. He could’ve caught up, but no he liked barking with his muzzle pretty much on this guy’s back. Also he had killed a MASSIVE English Bull mastiff because it was running at my mom. On our property mind you. So…. They’re a strange breed where, prey drive isn’t as important as mental stimulation is my dude. Which is what makes them such a good working dog
@@oblivion1751 those are bizarre stories. I’m sorry but you’re confusing territorial aggressiveness and protectiveness or obsessiveness. Motivation and prey drive (which is also called ball drive) is a foundational requirement during assessments. Mental stimulation comes from them figuring out how to obtain a reward, or ball for example, during specific tasks which is satisfying and extremely important. There’re no strange breed’s, but there are strange owners. I could lead you in a direction that explains a few things but what would I know, right?
@@kamo808 K9 is an acronym. It’s shorter for us lazy ppl than writing police canine, military working dog and explaining that they’re dogs specifically trained to assist members of law enforcement and military.
My bro was deployed much earlier in the conflict but had the same experience as you. They increased morale and brought a sense of happiness to the base.
@@slimtimgbn I don't think so. I would start with the Kennel Master and trainer at your base and go from there. Back in my day it was super competitive. Not anyone could do it. I had to clean kennels and drop pans for six months before I was ever allowed to put on a sleeve and decoy.
@@A5JDZK i'm pretty jealous of US handlers. You guys get the best of the bunch(dogs). While we love all the dogs we get, most of them have some kind of issue, could be a skin issue, dietery issue, behavioural issue etc while the US usually gets the best ones from the breeders
@@de20 We have an entire team of veterinarians and techs that medically screen the dogs for all kinds of injuries, illness and diseases. Then a team of Handlers evaluates the dogs to determine if they have the needed behaviors to be a working dog.
My dogs trainer was a military dog trainer and handler in the Vietnam era and after his service he went on to open his own dog training business. 40 yrs later still going strong and probably one of the best trainers around. Vet smart man.
Your dogs trainer probably trained dogs that scared my dad. Father was Vietnam vet and he described the wall around the installment he was posted at one time to be riddled with tons of German Shepherds at night and it basically was a moat of GSD's instead of alligators and he said he was actually scared of those dogs in the war because they would throw them down hunks of meat and it was basically like watching an alligator feeding frenzy, meat, bones, everything, just gone. He said he was afraid to leave his post. So when I brought a home a GSD and trained with the person who trained the PD K9's in my area and showed Schutzhund he was like "Ah, crap, I'm still going to get eaten alive". He was afraid when he first saw our GSD at 8 weeks old. That's how mean the dogs were in Vietnam. He eventually petted her and he can now recall her and she comes but he sticks his hand around the door with a treat first before he enters so she will take it and go lay down and then he comes in. He's always talking about her too. "Did you know she can split whole cow bones in half?" and "she would take out anyone to protect my daughter, she's really protective of her".
I remember speaking to an F-15 pilot at Lakenheath when I was a young K9 handler. He said “man that must be the coolest job in the world.” He was right. 🐾 🇺🇸❤️
My uncle used to work with the police and got my family a dog that failed the tests near the end. Tell you what, that dog was probably one of the best dogs I ever had as a pet. I would always use him as the yardstick to measure against (unfairly). He was highly intelligent and I swore knew English commands more than he left on. I wouldn't mind getting another one regardless of a pass or failure. These pets deserve our respect and our natural responsibility to take care of them since they give us so much. Probably why I love German Shepherds so much. 😀🐕 But my Alaskan malamute and part wolf was a very close second tbh but that dog was surprisingly strong as hell. Both in bite and dragging you around. Especially when she used her hind legs to pull you when she was excited. 😆
I raised a Belgian Mal, we got him when he was a sick lil pup, so he didn’t do much. He’d cuddle with me 24/7 and only take meds from me. I’d hang out outside a lot of times and so he drew the connection that he should go outside to go potty. Very smart little guy, as he got older we just got closer but he always knew what I was thinking, so we’d even wrestle sometimes, spontaneously for no reason at all. I’d be like “wanna fight” lmao. We’d wrestle for 7 to 8 hours sometimes. German sheps don’t have the energy for that, which, is probably a very good thing lmao. I miss the lil guy because I left home for the army. Funnily enough though when I call home, he takes my parent’s phone. Like, the phone he hears me from. It’s hilarious
I got a puppy that got disqualified at 7 weeks old because he would attack his siblings. They thought he was overly aggressive, the breeder even considered putting him down. Since I had a lot of experience I took on the task. He turned out amazing and we've competed in Schutzhund.
I have adopted my GSDs through the pound and have always adopted older dogs because puppies always get homes but the older dogs don't. Some of my dogs have come from abuse and neglect but as long as they have that beautiful shepherd heart, they become family. These working dogs are what my dogs could have been if they had been trained from a young age. It is wonderful to see.
Bless you for adopting the older dogs for exactly the reasons you state. Your dogs are not "could have been" -- they are because you adopted them with love from your heart. And when you do that, and show the pups your love, they'll lay down their lives for you. I know -- long time GSD owner.
Awesome. The sad thing is many people who turn over dogs like the ones you adopt is because they didn't do the research, and aside from the fact that they had no idea on how to properly train and care for a dog, they aren't able to live with a dog bred to work such as a working line German shepherd. I have one (have had four actually) and I get lots of comments like: "I want a dog like that. " And I'm like: "no you don't, not unless you are willing to devote a lot of time and energy in into being with this dog and giving him a job." It's heartbreaking for me to encounter so many gorgeous dogs with owners who are clearly incompetent, and those dogs never reach their full potential because they aren't with the appropriate human. And yeah, puppies… Every person and their grandmother wants one. At least they do initially until they realize just how much work goes into The proper raising in training that will make the puppy be the best dog possible. People still haven't figured out that to get their "dream dog ", they have to work there behind's off. Were that the case, pounds in shelters and rescue groups wouldn't exist. They shouldn't exist. HUMANS!
@@khanhhm5762 Yeah, it's really sad. I've been volunteering for a long time, and the number of GSD's in the shelters is the highest I've seen yet. I went a few days ago and I'd say half of the entire shelter population was just GSD and huskies.
@@killodendron i'm sorry, this is a super late response. That makes me super sad! Shepherds, and huskies are two of my favorite breeds. It really is heartbreaking when I see people falling in love for their looks, but they don't bother to do any more research, they get one, and then realize that they are not competent enough to meet the dog's needs. The dog then gets dumped. I wish I could find homes for every single one of them. And not just any home, but the appropriate home. I have all the respect for you for doing what you do. I have volunteered for rescues, but not for shelters. Rescues have their own drama… Mostly with the humans!
@@killodendron this is bullshit lol there are not record numbers of GSD in shelters. I too work in rescue and can tell you it’s almost entirely pit and pit mixes. NOT purebred German shepherds, which are rare in shelters.
What I always found interesting was in some situations a person with a gun, eh no big deal! The dog snarling and barking at you, almost instant compliance! Mad respect to the dogs, handlers, and trainers. It is incredible watching them in action.
@@blaznskais2048 lol it depends really.. you can be shot in ALLOT of places with some super painful but small rounds before dying & it'll probably be just as bad as being mauled by a dog🤷 you've at least got a chance to fight a dog off you! Nobody's ever outran or fought off a bullet lol
My dad use to be in the air force, he went through 4 dogs. 3 of them got pulled from him to another handler. He got mad each time, but had no choice but to let them go. He told me some good stories about these dogs. One time they where showing kids the dogs, when my dads dog at the time was acting weird from the heat, it was hot. When the dog latched onto my dads arm, not letting go. My dad was mad because the guy with protected dog armor didnt step in, so he struggled geting his jaw open. He still had the dog for a few months until he passed. That's the one of the three that didnt get pulled to another unit. He says he misses the dogs, but doesnt miss the heat, along with trying to control a dog.
Second comment but I had a friend who worked as a police dog handler for nine years. He worked with a particular German Shepherd and when the dog was due to retire he retired too (due to an injury sustained on duty) and took home the dog. It was extremely aggressive and would bark at people outside just walking by. The dog was conflicted and after his service suffered in the same way some people do when coming home. They've seen and experienced the very worst but it does not make them bad. The dog lived happily and died in 2018; he earned his stripes and earned his retirement regardless of those things.
Having a DDR working line shepherd has been one of the most rewarding experiences. These dogs are the most intelligent I’ve ever come in contact with and you can really see how much time has been put into breeding these specific traits into them.
These are amazing dogs! The dedication shown by the trainers & the dedication of the dogs to their tasks gave me chills. I would be so proud to work with military / police dogs. Of course we lose some of these heroes when they are deployed, but they would give their lives to save their handlers every day of the week. Dogs are just the best!
German Shepherds will always be special to me. My grandfather got me a German Shepherd puppy when I was around 2 years old to help me not be afraid of dogs. There will never be another shepherd like my Princess ❤ We had such a strong bond growing up together, she was the best girl ever and knew how to protect us and took it very seriously ❤ She taught me what a great family guard dog is and I’ll always miss her ❤
I trained with my K9 there back in 2007. Pretty cool to watch this video and see the classrooms, training fields and kennels I worked in and around. Those dogs are so well cared for. My dog, Lima125, Ora, was a great partner for many years. Some of the best time of my life.
Such intelligence and strength the dogs possess. I hope they don’t get hurt. Their contributions are so significant to safety. Very interesting work to train them.
I remember back 20yrs ago I was arrested for driving without a license. My luck it was a K-9 unit that made the stop. The officer had me sit in the back with the dog. I was scared straight. I didn’t move a muscle, not even to blink. But that’s where the love for dogs started 🤣🦮✊🏾✌🏾💯
I suffer from a neurological condition which ruled me out of joining the army but I wanted to go into working with dogs. The idea of the bond between me and my dog and the knowledge that if we are deployed overseas we are "two brothers" who will both be in charge of looking after the other seems like the most amazing relationship you could ever form with an animal. I don't know whether we deserve dogs as humans; they are so loyal, pure and faithful. For those who are reading this who happen to serve in the army (whether in the USA or the UK where I am) then THANK YOU FOR YOUR SERVICE.
I was blessed to work with these dogs on the Lackland AF base. They are truly amazing animals. This program is what developed my love for the belgian mals
Good for you and thank you. We adopted from a shelter a 6-ish yr old Mal who has had some formal training - it's obvious plus he understands German. Have no idea of his background though I know he was in service somewhere. Excellent dog.
I was a K9 MP handler and trainer at Lackland for a spell back in the early 90s- it’s good to know that things have gotten better in this department from the seven months to one year! My most memorable experience with any partner (K-9 OR Hoooman,I was ever assigned to) was in panama, Central America during Operation Just Cause - or as I like to call it, getting rid of pineapple face ;) my partner for 3 years during that tour was a Belgian Malanois named FLIPPY [back then the dogs were named by the breeders and we had no choice to try to change it, but he really loved his name] he was the most amazing dog I have ever met or have known since- I wish I could find his actual military records with all of the arrests and the mentions in the local newspapers down there that featured us because of all his skills- he was capable of doing all three of the components- patrol/attack, drug detection and bomb detection. And he did all of them at a high level level f success. Most other dogs are only good for one or two of those three categories. when we had competitions on the obstacle course (for public display or whatever) after I gave the command “do it” he would run the whole thing without me even trying to walk next to him and just show up right next to my side and heel automatically once he ran through the whole thing lickety-split! He did not work for treats, he did not work for toys, he worked for affection that is all. I ETS’d from Panama in 1992 and I was informed that a month later he had died from cancer two days after I left the country(my commanders did not want to inform me before I got to my next duty station) He was the best damn dog I’ve ever known (and I have had plenty- whether MWD or personal pets Great job on this production to whoever deserves the kudos :) Looks like things are changing for the better for our k-9 soldiers and heroes!
@ricardobezas3728 Hello Ricardo. I am developing a story to honor military dogs. I would love to interview you for a story about FLIPPY. Can I get in touch with you?
Having an intelligent, focused dog feels like a privilege. Got two Rottweiler mixes myself and the things they do sometimes just flat out surprise me lol
I miss being in! My second tour in Iraq I worked with some AWESOME South African dog handlers who were contracted to do “stuff” lol they taught me so much in 2005 that I was able to build a solid foundation of knowledge and training to eventually be able to my own my service dog. So cool to see what they taught me in action! Great video!
I miss being in too,Raul,did 4 yrs US Navy & 7 yrs US Army and did 4 deployments to Iraq with the Texas National Guard ( I volunteered for all 4 tours ) in an infantry unit at Camp TQ ( mid 2004/2005 ) it was still hot and popping in Iraq. Camp TQ was a marine fob,my battalion fell under their authority and they never let us forget either. LOL. Some times we did joint ops with them. Our brigade went to Tilan,Iraq. Saw plenty of action,but,that's what I was there for. Also did 2 deployments back-to-back. i was still PISSED about 9-11,that's what FUELLED my FIRE !!! Wanted some PAYBACK for attacking our country. And I wanted to do something challenging and dangerous.I problably would've done 3 deployments in a row,but on my 2nd tour I got hurt real bad,had to be flown to Ramstein Air Force hospitol in Germany for my wounds. I was there for 3 months,I got there for October-fest. Had never been to Germany,I was SHOCKED at seeing German kids drinking alcohol in the pubs,much less being in adult pubs.I stayed at the Kyle barracks in Germany.I could tell you about my treatment once returning to the states at Ft Hoo,Tx ( we did our 3 month train-up there ) but this thread is long enough already. SEMPER-FI.
I have a working GSD, who is the smartest, easiest, most willing dog I have ever had, including several goldens. It is a totally different experience training and playing with him. He has the high bite strength, but he doesn't bite down if he misses the target and hits my flesh, at least not while playing, he did have IPO training before I adopted him. They are not suitable dogs for new owners or ones who don't have time, or access to any open land, despite how obedient they are. Edit: To be clear, I'm not implying I'm an expert, I have a trainer teaching me to train him, despite years of experience and working at a rescue.
I breed German Shorthaired Pointers for detection work (mostly cash, drugs & explosives) Seeing the development of my pups as the grow into amazing working dogs, fills me with so much pride. I'm so happy to be able to help in some small way, to keep people safe.
These dogs are wonderful. Controlled and very powerful. Years ago I took bites from A German trained male. He was not afraid of anything. Nothing. Afterwards my arm felt like it had been stood upon. I cannot imagine what it would be like without the bite sleeve. The damage would be significant. Yes the dog loves to work. The good ones just want to make their handler happy. Play!
They get donated. They are extremely well bred and raised so they always find interested people, even between military themselves. It's the same when retired.
Depends what area they fail in....if they are great at sniffing drugs but sucks at tracking people, or get injured, they get "reassigned" for other things.
There are some videos about in field handlers training with the dogs. You see them sleep with their dogs every night. You see them have bonded. You also see things not seen here as this is like basic. For some dogs they will go and be with a handler through a military drill where there are explosions and loud noises to see if the dog panics and runs because when they said they need them very brave and a lot of go there can be very loud noises in the field including gunfire so if they cower and run then it's a wash. There was one handler who lost his dog after a very long standoff with a man in the Afghanistan war with an insurgent who was dug in. They had exchanged gunfire and believed the insurgent was out of ammo. The dog was sent in to a heavily covered area and while the dog did get the insurgent pinned long enough for the men to come in and get him, he did also stab the dog and when the handler called for the dog and he didn't come back, he knew he was gone. The dog have as much gear on them as the soldiers do and they wear a beacon, but they still were unable to find him. The commander only let them look for so long before he said they needed to leave. There was an entire thing about it on VICE as when a soldier returns home the military would make soldiers promises that when the dogs retires the soldier could have it but the military did NOT make good on those promises. You see one veteran trying to get the dog that almost died with him by asking this man nicely and the man couldn't care less and treated this soldier like crap. You see another be reunited with his dog and he recognizes him right away. It's sad but it goes through more training they have to do as this is in US boot camp for the dogs. BTW My personal opinion is that if the dog retires and the handler is also not currently serving/tours over wants him they should have first dibbs over civilians. As a civilian if you came to my door and said the dog I got from the war you served with and this dog just ran up and pounced on you and started licking you like he knew you there is no way I could keep a veteran from his dog.
I was accidentally bitten by one when I was stationed in Saudi Arabia for the Air Force 😂 Those 🐕 are awesome but also frightening af Cheers from San Diego California
There was a story on the news about a few months ago here, where iirc two military dogs happened to break open their kennels over night and when in the morning, the care taker went to feed them, he was killed by them. These dogs were after that assessed to be euthanized or to be able to stay in military work. But I don't know what the end result was.
@@petrescuework-difficultcas6581 They would be euthenissed sadly because of this. Biting without command and even killing is aggression. Aggression for the USA trained dogs means euthenissed
@@instantname3473 It wasn't in the US though but in Germany. Our laws for killing animals are very strict with very high regulation. One bite incident doesn't justify a euthanization by law here.
Working Line GSD's out of Europe are AMAZING. herding and farm work by day. Protection work by night. We now have Schutzhund and IPO. When I met with my breeders who are from Europe they could not believe we have kibble in the US or feed it to our dogs. The names with Von ____ Haus is like "from the house of" and you took pride in any dogs you bred and any dogs you raised and trained as they were part of your family and they literally showed me how they cooked for their dogs every single day. They had never seen or heard of kibble before and had always cooked for their dogs and topped the cooked rice, barely, etc and vege's with raw meat.
@@Lizzard2060 It's an actual tragedy... The 80's consumer plunge truely destroyed the at-home markets that this country did best and depended on. Hopefully we're on our way back to small industries in local vicinities producing products by the people for the people.
@@turtlenoheart It destroyed other things as well. Quality being one thing. My father kept clothes from pre 80's and the denim is thick and I wouldn't destroy it in a day and it was common and not what I need to search for in high quality Denim and Duck material now. Same thing with Wool coats. Now we have cheap fast fashion and the clothes rip in one day. People had multiple skills other than their main job. We still do it that way but it's harder and harder and kids raised in apartments and fancy homes didn't know the difference between a nail and a screw. When I was at the gym, they asked me for advice when their fence kept falling over and I have livestock so I've put up many a fence and was even asked if I am a handyman and I don't think I know very much. Lots of people had gardens. Oh, and the GSD's weren't bred to have a slanted back without being posed that way. If you have been to a GSD show recently . . . we don't use American GSD lines for a reason, many have the slant back without placing a foot out, shorter lifespans due to this breeding issue as the hips are gone by 8 yrs old and healthy European imports like mine that have a straight back when just standing and work and live up to 14 yrs. . .and are looked at as weird by American breeders. Similar things are happening in the equine world as well as life expectancy has come down from 30+ yrs of good working time to actually death at 18yrs because we start them too young, some american riders are a bit oversized for their mounts, and we don't put in the care that we should. TB's in particular are having bleeding issues that have never been seen before in the breed. I would also enjoy if we did not have so much Chinese cheap plastic crap.
Thank you so much for helping me understand all that go's into training working dogs for the military. And for all those working dogs a big WOOF. Thank you for your service,,💜💜💜
I have a self trained Malinois... (THANK YOU YOU TUBE) She's not on these dogs level but she is damn close. Great breed if you have the time and energy for them, and the deep pockets. Most people I do not believe have that time, inclination or energy and would only be getting a home wrecking machine. Frisby induced tennis elbow in two arms in only three years.
Unfortunately people just get a dog based on its looks or "coolness" then never do research. Neighbor has a husky that just sits in the backyard all day. Those dogs needs space and someone to guide them. And not to mention huskies get bored QUICK. And she makes sure we all know she's bored at 6am in the morning.
@@instantname3473 you’re reading my comment incorrectly. If *Favor* is concerned about THEIR neighbor’s husky, asking/offering to take it for a walk might ease their worries and benefit the dog, ie; *Favor* doing something about it. Maybe the owner doesn’t have the required time currently, or is handicapped, etc.. whatever, and wouldn’t mind someone, in this case *Favor* taking THEIR husky for some exercise and stimulation. What’s your issue with this? Do people not talk to their neighbors anymore or offer them assistance? Make sense?? Anything else?…
Thanks for the awesome Video. We have had a german shepherd that were somewhat trained (by the breeder) but not actively attacking humans. The animals are very intimidating for most people anyway, so training like the above is unnecessary for normal people. But most of the time, these animals will also help you in an emergency, because they just have it in their blood (I've experienced it before). These animals have been bred as guard dogs for decades. But you also have to offer the animal plenty of playtime and exercise, because they just have a lot of power. Unfortunately our dog died last year at the age of 12. Big dogs don't grow old. Anyway, I love these animals and would get one again in a heartbeat. They are very intelligent and also nice to strangers (at least ours back then). Greetings from Germany.
My GSD died at the age of 12 just recently and I haven't been dealing well with the loss. All of my dogs are from the pound and she was severely misused for the first half of her life, which may have shortened her life span. These dogs are amazing and I am sorry for your loss. God bless you for taking one of these wonderful dogs into your heart.
Those dogs are lucky to be where they are. I feel like there's a lot of would-be owners who only want this dog because they saw some video, but won't bother to take the time to actually develop the dog.
It’s a huge issue sadly, I do rescue work in my spare time to save these beautiful animals from meeting the fate of the shelters when those pieces of shit give them up.
Absolutely fantastic work by Military & wonderfully clever dogs. Great teamwork! My Akita/Shepherd was from breeder/ ex-policeman. As a 6 month old pup her play-fight antics were exceptional, she’d grab your wrist & literarily twist your arm behind your back. Gospel truth. Most of the time she was a sweetie, loving & caring. She died 1 month after my hub. died (he was her special daddy. I was the ‘play toy!). Miss my girl, JaneR
How cool. I just wanted to add that when they retire these dogs, they do allow you to adopt them. The notices probably don't make it to the public but if you work on a base, they do publicize it if they are available. I'm sure they make great extended family members.
Trained dogs in the Military Working Dog Unit. They are such intelligent creatures and they pick up commands fast. Just needed to reinforce every few weeks and they were good to go for operations. There were two types of dogs. One to train new soldiers dog handling and another for real operations at the air force bases. The operational dogs were vicious.
Actually fun fact: most dogs that work in the military ore police have come from the netherlands since the training program that the dutch do with its dogs has been so optimized to preform at highest regard The dog that took down the leader of ISIS had dutch origin
I worked with the Military dogs when I was in the USAF. I was in the veterinarian service from 72 - 76. We took care of the dogs medical needs. I was stationed on a Minuteman base where we had nuclear ordinance. When i separated I did miss the dogs and the duty.
Malinois are dogs with unparalleled focus and devotion. To the point they will harm themselves just to do their job. Amazing connection between the handlers and their dogs.
we need security teams implemented in every school across America with protection dogs. if you haven’t heard, the officers from the Uvalde shooting were in the school for over an hour while the shooter took likes... these dogs don’t have the fear of taking a bullet.
@@zesk6718 they should obviously fix the school education system before putting in guard dogs, or they'll just be protecting kids who'll grow up to be dumber and dumber every generation
My opinion. I know the USA has a large amount of gun crime, but very little regulation of guns (varies depending on the state from what I’ve heard). Why not instead of posting security teams outside every school, draining valuable resources and money, why not regulate guns more strictly? Just my opinion.
Military dogs are so smart they protect family members as well. I had an MP as a neighbor years ago. He would bring the dog home. We all felt safer knowing his dog was around. A Rottweiler got loose and tried to attack his daughter. That German Shepard sprung into action. He was the neighborhood hero. Even when we came home walking up with groceries he sat and watched us. He knew all of us. He was a gem.
I used to live near Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio but I did not know they had a program to where they let the residents take the puppies and care for him for 6 months. Awesome idea I'd love to be part of that.. 💞💞
Growing up my dad's best friend was a K9 officer. His dog was a German Shepherd called Cyrus. I remember going to the officer's house all the and playing tug o' war with Cyrus. Sadly, a year after he was retired Cyrus got cancer and was put down. Broke all of our hearts.
Those puppies are adorable. It would be so hard to turn a foster back over to the program after we’d raised it for 7 months. That’s how many working dogs are trained though.
Overwhelming to think that a few of my GSD pups were trained there and are serving for the US Military - bless the brave pups, Momma is now retired and living her best life as a pet :) greetings from germany!
I miss my working k9! I wish I would have been able to keep him once I got out of the USAF. Now, I have a goodest boy GSD named Lando and he's my heart. These dogs are amazing and perform such feats. Definitely great dogs!
My late nan's dad had a pure white german shepard during ww2 when he was in the military police and my nan said the memories she had of rex(she was born in 51) was that he was a very loveable and friendly dog with people but always very obedient.
I train at Lackland Airforce Base in 1979, Dog Handler's School, and we trained Sentry Dogs; Bomb Detection, and Drug Dogs, as well as Patrol Dogs that assisted in Special Opps Units Tracking down Terrorist over seas, My Dog was named "Ugly" and he was so fierce, I had to train alone because he would attack almost everyone who came within his space!!! Great Dog without a doubt or contradiction!!! (T.S.U.) S. Korea!!!
Ngl this was kinda informative, I actually wanna enlist in the army as a K-9 unit this honestly looks really fun, and I have always grown up liking dogs, I’ve always wanted to train my dog in which I’m working on now.
When they showed the puppies my heart melted
Ok I'm glad you said that cause mine did also.
*squishes puppies in a pulverising machine*
@@grieferoncamera4600 *Scoops up puppy pulp and consumes*
@@hwfq34fajw9foiffawdiufhuaiwfhw they get to lick the trainer's boots and they then get shot in the head, i saw it on a leak
@@hwfq34fajw9foiffawdiufhuaiwfhw none…. They’re adopted out,or if they are not quite up to operational use repurposed for training purposes.
I dated a girl in high school who's dad was a k9 officer. He also was the founder of a working dog foundation and trained dogs for many agencies. He brought me training with them one day and had me wear the suit and the arm thing.
I think he was trying to scare me off, but I loved it. Used to train with them all the time. It was a lot of fun
Lol, that's amazing
He was testing you to see how good you really were for his daughter I feel hahaha
Oml that's so awesome, the dream
Did you stay with that girl ? She seems to have an awesome dad. My father-in-law is the total opposite, he his the weakest man I ever met, I offered many many times to perform tasks for him or begged him to test my capability and he never ever took the opportunity, his say was "my daughter does what she want, you don't need my approval" it totally unsettled me since I come from a very different social background (super wealthy white & conservative while she is from white, liberal and blue-collar background).
You should marry girls who are good, you shouldn't hurt them, there are plenty of hoes to be used but the good girls you gotta love them
These dogs are such incredible creatures. To think how much goes into them is just mind boggling.
All dogs are incredible creatures
90% graduation rate is crazy good
One shot is all it takes💀
@@wizcombo Better than us humans
@@jerrylin2044 seriously! Dogs are so awesome!
One of my biggest regrets was not realizing this was an option when I joined the Air Force. I've had Malinois for decades now and I can't imagine getting paid to work with them every day, it would have easily resulted in me doing a full 20 years.
You probably wouldn't have made it through the selection process for this unless you think you could finish somewhere near the absolute top of your class in various combat arms qualification.
@@janegoodall1837 Raised by a SWAT officer whose best friend was a Recon Marine, firearm proficiency would have been the least of my issues in this regard.
😅 I'm interested to know what makes someone own a Mal as a pet! What made you pick one of these dogs?
@@ChaseBond11 I think it is about their intensity, they are so energetic and sensitive that if trained properly they could become absolute machines. They are also less likely to have medical conditions.
@@DosPerspectiva No doubt they make great working dogs, but I figured that non stop energy would be too much for people.
I became a Military Working Dog Handler (Security Police K9) back in 1975. We were issued dogs that were already trained. The dogs actually trained the students back then. The instructors did tell us what to do but the dogs led us through it for 12 weeks. Longer if you went drug or bomb school. That was a very rewarding part of my life!
Do you know if you can adopt the dog if you want ??
@@michaelsharpe4920 dog handler 64-65
My brother was a US Federal Police his German Shepherd was named "Tonka" he served 8 years protecting president Bush & Obama. One of the few times they were at home from traveling he got out of his compound and instead of running up and down the street like a untrained dog he went to my brothers front porch and started guarding the house. His neighbor was afraid to come out of her house. She called my brother and told him Tonka was loose and on his porch. RIP Tonka he was really a beauty and a top soldier. He retired and passed away at 14 yrs old.
You just made all that up, for sure.
Not a single bit of that was true
Haters gonna hate. I believe you OP
@@dudedog7914 Geez. I'm a 50 yr old man who was reflecting on memorial day about the 125 years of military service my family dedicated to this country. My brother served 20 yrs in the Navy and became a US police after his service. Tonka his dog was a beloved member of our family. I just saw this video that reminded of him. What a idiot. Lol
@@dukester9506 read their other comments… they need attention.
I have a Belgian Malinois whose been through some specified training. This is what they are bred to do. They are absolutely magnificent animals. I love my Maligator
They are such beautiful dogs. Sadly they are not exactly the right breed for therapy dogs 😅.
Nobody cares about ur dog😂😂na jk
I had one too. We picked him off of the streets of Spain. He would probably have been euthanised. He a had a great rest of his life until the ripe old age of 15. Would never want any other dog than a Mali.
@@JustMe-12345 I disagree that Malinois may not be exactly the right fit for everyone as a therapy dog. They are and have strived as therapy dogs and personally have experience with mals as psd’s, specifically diabetic alert dogs, companions for human’s with ptsd and people with developmental disabilities. I also know that Belgian Malinois are in service as epilepsy warning dogs.
Stop teaching them the aggresive way to socialize , its not normal, even in wildlife they're not socialize to be in aggresion between tbeir hierarchy but more to protect and avert danger instead. Why human legalize and justify their manipulation of exploitation towards inferior canine cub as "teaching"
Its inhuman
I work there as a caretaker for these dogs. We care for and handle these dogs for multiple reasons, so they are like family to us. The trainers, military handlers, and vet staff all do amazing work and are very dedicated. Being able to care for them and seeing them progress is always so rewarding. I also got to adopt a retired MWD and they can definitely make great family members too
That's some good work you all do. Something I've wondered for a while is if animals are able to feel pride for the work they do and in their service. Do you think they do?
@@actualteddybear891 I don’t think they can feel what we consider pride for service, but they can surely take pride in being praised/rewarded for doing work. Work is like play to many of them.
@@A22A8 If they're happy then that's good.
Hey, Do you think for male and female dogs for this program they are typically not neutered/spayed as it relates to the personality and energy drive for working that's required of the dogs? I noticed at least 2 male dogs were intact.
Completely genuine question for you, no disrespect whatsoever, but I've been volunteering with shelters for 15 years or so and the sheer number of young GSD that are euthanized every day is mind blowing. Are rescues ever used for these military jobs? The majority of them are surrendered because people buy them as pups and expect them to be couch potatoes, when in reality they have that strong drive to work and please.
Just something I've been curious about for a while now. 🐕🦺🐾
Man I love seeing the training of a working dog. The trainers and the dogs are so awesome
💯💯💯
Lies again? Face Of ArmyDogs
Same here. I love dogs ❤
@@NazriB wha
As an Army senior dog handler I appreciate the dogs we used.
I could imagine that you got a really good peak into just how intelligent dogs are.
Can we take a moment to appreciate the narrator's flawless voice? I absolutely love it. Not too deep, but powerful enough to grab your attention
Can we take a moment to appreciate the air in this video? I absolutely love it. Not too humid, but fresh enough to let you breathe.
@@klafterdev5558 that made me chuckle harder than I expected, thanks
Interesting. Normally I don't mind any narrations but when this clip started I thought 'ah the deliberate sounding American TV voice'
(Which I find kinda annoying due to its use as an over-dramatistion tool in other shows. They don't over-dramatise in this though).
@@MsLouisez I get what you mean, its annoying if they add jumpy music and sound effects.
thirsty much
I’ve had the privilege of talking to a K9 handler from the Singapore Army Military Police formation. I found it really interesting that despite all the differences between military and civilian dogs, there’s a lot of similarity in terms of training and conditioning. I found it quite ironic that their dogs are trained to be aggressive and territorial while those are exactly the opposite behaviors I trained my dog on. He’d be working as a therapy dog soon which is the polar opposite of a MWD. Still, they’re both dogs who love attention, playtimes and treats
Prey drive is assessed very early on and begins before birth in working dog breeding programs. Natural behavior’s are reinforced throughout their career but explains why breeds are specifically used for certain work.
@@2K9s I mean, I trained mine to protect my mom, and care for her. His prey drive is more of a THIS IS MY TERRITORY, and GIMME CUDDLES. I think he’s lost his marbles though because he only seems to go after people
And other dogs, specifically if they’re being hostile to my family. My parents have caught him chasing burglars just for shits and giggles. He could’ve caught up, but no he liked barking with his muzzle pretty much on this guy’s back. Also he had killed a MASSIVE English Bull mastiff because it was running at my mom. On our property mind you. So…. They’re a strange breed where, prey drive isn’t as important as mental stimulation is my dude. Which is what makes them such a good working dog
@@oblivion1751 those are bizarre stories. I’m sorry but you’re confusing territorial aggressiveness and protectiveness or obsessiveness. Motivation and prey drive (which is also called ball drive) is a foundational requirement during assessments. Mental stimulation comes from them figuring out how to obtain a reward, or ball for example, during specific tasks which is satisfying and extremely important. There’re no strange breed’s, but there are strange owners. I could lead you in a direction that explains a few things but what would I know, right?
whats it with this K9 instead of Dog. Its not like Dog is such a long word.
@@kamo808 K9 is an acronym. It’s shorter for us lazy ppl than writing police canine, military working dog and explaining that they’re dogs specifically trained to assist members of law enforcement and military.
I guess the hardest stage of the training is when they’re still puppies, How can you resist those cuteness??
I agree. Must have been the damn tough thing for the handlers
I deployed with two of them in Afghanistan 2011-2012 and they are such great motivation boosters and amazing at what they do.
My bro was deployed much earlier in the conflict but had the same experience as you. They increased morale and brought a sense of happiness to the base.
Thank you for your service! ❤
Best job I ever had. I remember telling another K9 Handler during a bite work demo, "I can't believe we get paid to do this!"
Who knew that they get paid to be a human sized training chew toy
im currently in, do you have to be an E5 to go to K9 school?
@@slimtimgbn I don't think so. I would start with the Kennel Master and trainer at your base and go from there. Back in my day it was super competitive. Not anyone could do it. I had to clean kennels and drop pans for six months before I was ever allowed to put on a sleeve and decoy.
@@A5JDZK i'm pretty jealous of US handlers. You guys get the best of the bunch(dogs). While we love all the dogs we get, most of them have some kind of issue, could be a skin issue, dietery issue, behavioural issue etc while the US usually gets the best ones from the breeders
@@de20 We have an entire team of veterinarians and techs that medically screen the dogs for all kinds of injuries, illness and diseases. Then a team of Handlers evaluates the dogs to determine if they have the needed behaviors to be a working dog.
"Dogs are man's best friend" is a big understatement, They're loyal to the very end 🐶💙
It's kind of weird. They're both our best friends to the end and yet also ptobably one of the more terrifying weapons in our arsenal.
My dogs trainer was a military dog trainer and handler in the Vietnam era and after his service he went on to open his own dog training business. 40 yrs later still going strong and probably one of the best trainers around. Vet smart man.
Your dogs trainer probably trained dogs that scared my dad. Father was Vietnam vet and he described the wall around the installment he was posted at one time to be riddled with tons of German Shepherds at night and it basically was a moat of GSD's instead of alligators and he said he was actually scared of those dogs in the war because they would throw them down hunks of meat and it was basically like watching an alligator feeding frenzy, meat, bones, everything, just gone. He said he was afraid to leave his post. So when I brought a home a GSD and trained with the person who trained the PD K9's in my area and showed Schutzhund he was like "Ah, crap, I'm still going to get eaten alive". He was afraid when he first saw our GSD at 8 weeks old. That's how mean the dogs were in Vietnam. He eventually petted her and he can now recall her and she comes but he sticks his hand around the door with a treat first before he enters so she will take it and go lay down and then he comes in. He's always talking about her too. "Did you know she can split whole cow bones in half?" and "she would take out anyone to protect my daughter, she's really protective of her".
Sounds like Frank Catania
How does one become a trainer of the dogs? This is an amazing informative video!
It amazes me how unbelievably smart these dogs are!
I remember speaking to an F-15 pilot at Lakenheath when I was a young K9 handler. He said “man that must be the coolest job in the world.” He was right. 🐾 🇺🇸❤️
"Their envy will be measured only by their distain"
My uncle used to work with the police and got my family a dog that failed the tests near the end.
Tell you what, that dog was probably one of the best dogs I ever had as a pet. I would always use him as the yardstick to measure against (unfairly). He was highly intelligent and I swore knew English commands more than he left on.
I wouldn't mind getting another one regardless of a pass or failure. These pets deserve our respect and our natural responsibility to take care of them since they give us so much.
Probably why I love German Shepherds so much. 😀🐕 But my Alaskan malamute and part wolf was a very close second tbh but that dog was surprisingly strong as hell. Both in bite and dragging you around. Especially when she used her hind legs to pull you when she was excited. 😆
These are incredible dogs!
I raised a Belgian Mal, we got him when he was a sick lil pup, so he didn’t do much. He’d cuddle with me 24/7 and only take meds from me. I’d hang out outside a lot of times and so he drew the connection that he should go outside to go potty. Very smart little guy, as he got older we just got closer but he always knew what I was thinking, so we’d even wrestle sometimes, spontaneously for no reason at all. I’d be like “wanna fight” lmao. We’d wrestle for 7 to 8 hours sometimes. German sheps don’t have the energy for that, which, is probably a very good thing lmao. I miss the lil guy because I left home for the army. Funnily enough though when I call home, he takes my parent’s phone. Like, the phone he hears me from. It’s hilarious
@@oblivion1751 Nice, I haven't been able to get the backbone to get another yet. It's hard to get another knowing they don't live long enough (imo)
I got a puppy that got disqualified at 7 weeks old because he would attack his siblings. They thought he was overly aggressive, the breeder even considered putting him down. Since I had a lot of experience I took on the task. He turned out amazing and we've competed in Schutzhund.
I have adopted my GSDs through the pound and have always adopted older dogs because puppies always get homes but the older dogs don't. Some of my dogs have come from abuse and neglect but as long as they have that beautiful shepherd heart, they become family. These working dogs are what my dogs could have been if they had been trained from a young age. It is wonderful to see.
Bless you for adopting the older dogs for exactly the reasons you state. Your dogs are not "could have been" -- they are because you adopted them with love from your heart. And when you do that, and show the pups your love, they'll lay down their lives for you. I know -- long time GSD owner.
Awesome. The sad thing is many people who turn over dogs like the ones you adopt is because they didn't do the research, and aside from the fact that they had no idea on how to properly train and care for a dog, they aren't able to live with a dog bred to work such as a working line German shepherd. I have one (have had four actually) and I get lots of comments like: "I want a dog like that. "
And I'm like: "no you don't, not unless you are willing to devote a lot of time and energy in into being with this dog and giving him a job."
It's heartbreaking for me to encounter so many gorgeous dogs with owners who are clearly incompetent, and those dogs never reach their full potential because they aren't with the appropriate human.
And yeah, puppies… Every person and their grandmother wants one. At least they do initially until they realize just how much work goes into The proper raising in training that will make the puppy be the best dog possible. People still haven't figured out that to get their "dream dog ", they have to work there behind's off. Were that the case, pounds in shelters and rescue groups wouldn't exist. They shouldn't exist. HUMANS!
@@khanhhm5762 Yeah, it's really sad. I've been volunteering for a long time, and the number of GSD's in the shelters is the highest I've seen yet. I went a few days ago and I'd say half of the entire shelter population was just GSD and huskies.
@@killodendron i'm sorry, this is a super late response.
That makes me super sad! Shepherds, and huskies are two of my favorite breeds. It really is heartbreaking when I see people falling in love for their looks, but they don't bother to do any more research, they get one, and then realize that they are not competent enough to meet the dog's needs. The dog then gets dumped. I wish I could find homes for every single one of them. And not just any home, but the appropriate home.
I have all the respect for you for doing what you do. I have volunteered for rescues, but not for shelters. Rescues have their own drama… Mostly with the humans!
@@killodendron this is bullshit lol there are not record numbers of GSD in shelters. I too work in rescue and can tell you it’s almost entirely pit and pit mixes. NOT purebred German shepherds, which are rare in shelters.
What I always found interesting was in some situations a person with a gun, eh no big deal! The dog snarling and barking at you, almost instant compliance! Mad respect to the dogs, handlers, and trainers. It is incredible watching them in action.
It's probably because of instinct more than anything.
I think it’s a bit more painful to have a dog rip your flesh than getting shot (idk for sure I’ve never been shot)
@@michelleobamafootcream9292 Definitely would be, but being shot is more lethal.
Cause most people would honestly rather get shot than torn apart by a dog.
@@blaznskais2048 lol it depends really.. you can be shot in ALLOT of places with some super painful but small rounds before dying & it'll probably be just as bad as being mauled by a dog🤷 you've at least got a chance to fight a dog off you! Nobody's ever outran or fought off a bullet lol
My dad use to be in the air force, he went through 4 dogs. 3 of them got pulled from him to another handler. He got mad each time, but had no choice but to let them go. He told me some good stories about these dogs. One time they where showing kids the dogs, when my dads dog at the time was acting weird from the heat, it was hot. When the dog latched onto my dads arm, not letting go. My dad was mad because the guy with protected dog armor didnt step in, so he struggled geting his jaw open. He still had the dog for a few months until he passed. That's the one of the three that didnt get pulled to another unit. He says he misses the dogs, but doesnt miss the heat, along with trying to control a dog.
Second comment but I had a friend who worked as a police dog handler for nine years. He worked with a particular German Shepherd and when the dog was due to retire he retired too (due to an injury sustained on duty) and took home the dog. It was extremely aggressive and would bark at people outside just walking by. The dog was conflicted and after his service suffered in the same way some people do when coming home. They've seen and experienced the very worst but it does not make them bad. The dog lived happily and died in 2018; he earned his stripes and earned his retirement regardless of those things.
Having a DDR working line shepherd has been one of the most rewarding experiences. These dogs are the most intelligent I’ve ever come in contact with and you can really see how much time has been put into breeding these specific traits into them.
...As in the German Democratic Republic?
Just got my ddr/Czech gsd. First ever gsd. I love him. Amazing maturing rate so far.
These are amazing dogs! The dedication shown by the trainers & the dedication of the dogs to their tasks gave me chills. I would be so proud to work with military / police dogs. Of course we lose some of these heroes when they are deployed, but they would give their lives to save their handlers every day of the week. Dogs are just the best!
German Shepherds will always be special to me. My grandfather got me a German Shepherd puppy when I was around 2 years old to help me not be afraid of dogs. There will never be another shepherd like my Princess ❤ We had such a strong bond growing up together, she was the best girl ever and knew how to protect us and took it very seriously ❤ She taught me what a great family guard dog is and I’ll always miss her ❤
I trained with my K9 there back in 2007. Pretty cool to watch this video and see the classrooms, training fields and kennels I worked in and around. Those dogs are so well cared for. My dog, Lima125, Ora, was a great partner for many years. Some of the best time of my life.
what happens when they age?
@@ombra306 they retire and are adopted
Such intelligence and strength the dogs possess. I hope they don’t get hurt. Their contributions are so significant to safety. Very interesting work to train them.
I remember back 20yrs ago I was arrested for driving without a license. My luck it was a K-9 unit that made the stop. The officer had me sit in the back with the dog. I was scared straight. I didn’t move a muscle, not even to blink. But that’s where the love for dogs started 🤣🦮✊🏾✌🏾💯
These K9s are family. They train together they work together they live together with their handlers! Awesome teamwork skills.
I suffer from a neurological condition which ruled me out of joining the army but I wanted to go into working with dogs. The idea of the bond between me and my dog and the knowledge that if we are deployed overseas we are "two brothers" who will both be in charge of looking after the other seems like the most amazing relationship you could ever form with an animal. I don't know whether we deserve dogs as humans; they are so loyal, pure and faithful. For those who are reading this who happen to serve in the army (whether in the USA or the UK where I am) then THANK YOU FOR YOUR SERVICE.
I was blessed to work with these dogs on the Lackland AF base. They are truly amazing animals. This program is what developed my love for the belgian mals
Good for you and thank you. We adopted from a shelter a 6-ish yr old Mal who has had some formal training - it's obvious plus he understands German. Have no idea of his background though I know he was in service somewhere. Excellent dog.
I was a K9 MP handler and trainer at Lackland for a spell back in the early 90s- it’s good to know that things have gotten better in this department from the seven months to one year!
My most memorable experience with any partner (K-9 OR Hoooman,I was ever assigned to) was in panama, Central America during Operation Just Cause - or as I like to call it, getting rid of pineapple face ;)
my partner for 3 years during that tour was a Belgian Malanois named FLIPPY [back then the dogs were named by the breeders and we had no choice to try to change it, but he really loved his name] he was the most amazing dog I have ever met or have known since- I wish I could find his actual military records with all of the arrests and the mentions in the local newspapers down there that featured us because of all his skills- he was capable of doing all three of the components- patrol/attack, drug detection and bomb detection. And he did all of them at a high level level f success. Most other dogs are only good for one or two of those three categories. when we had competitions on the obstacle course (for public display or whatever) after I gave the command “do it” he would run the whole thing without me even trying to walk next to him and just show up right next to my side and heel automatically once he ran through the whole thing lickety-split! He did not work for treats, he did not work for toys, he worked for affection that is all.
I ETS’d from Panama in 1992 and I was informed that a month later he had died from cancer two days after I left the country(my commanders did not want to inform me before I got to my next duty station)
He was the best damn dog I’ve ever known (and I have had plenty- whether MWD or personal pets
Great job on this production to whoever deserves the kudos :)
Looks like things are changing for the better for our k-9 soldiers and heroes!
I’m SOOO sincerely sorry to hear that about your dog/partner❣️ They sure do give us their ALL 💜🐾💔🐾💜
@ricardobezas3728 Hello Ricardo. I am developing a story to honor military dogs. I would love to interview you for a story about FLIPPY. Can I get in touch with you?
Having an intelligent, focused dog feels like a privilege. Got two Rottweiler mixes myself and the things they do sometimes just flat out surprise me lol
I miss being in! My second tour in Iraq I worked with some AWESOME South African dog handlers who were contracted to do “stuff” lol they taught me so much in 2005 that I was able to build a solid foundation of knowledge and training to eventually be able to my own my service dog. So cool to see what they taught me in action! Great video!
I miss being in too,Raul,did 4 yrs US Navy & 7 yrs US Army and did 4 deployments to Iraq with the Texas National Guard ( I volunteered for all 4 tours ) in an infantry unit at Camp TQ ( mid 2004/2005 ) it was still hot and popping in Iraq. Camp TQ was a marine fob,my battalion fell under their authority and they never let us forget either. LOL. Some times we did joint ops with them. Our brigade went to Tilan,Iraq. Saw plenty of action,but,that's what I was there for. Also did 2 deployments back-to-back. i was still PISSED about 9-11,that's what FUELLED my FIRE !!! Wanted some PAYBACK for attacking our country. And I wanted to do something challenging and dangerous.I problably would've done 3 deployments in a row,but on my 2nd tour I got hurt real bad,had to be flown to Ramstein Air Force hospitol in Germany for my wounds. I was there for 3 months,I got there for October-fest. Had never been to Germany,I was SHOCKED at seeing German kids drinking alcohol in the pubs,much less being in adult pubs.I stayed at the Kyle barracks in Germany.I could tell you about my treatment once returning to the states at Ft Hoo,Tx ( we did our 3 month train-up there ) but this thread is long enough already. SEMPER-FI.
Thank you for your service!
@@gardeniabrune2125 Thank you for recognizing my service,Gardenia,it was an HONOR to serve. SEMPER-Fi
@@gardeniabrune2125 appreciate you
These dogs aren't tools, they are soldiers. Handler and K9 are a team unit where one can not function without the other.
I have a working GSD, who is the smartest, easiest, most willing dog I have ever had, including several goldens. It is a totally different experience training and playing with him. He has the high bite strength, but he doesn't bite down if he misses the target and hits my flesh, at least not while playing, he did have IPO training before I adopted him. They are not suitable dogs for new owners or ones who don't have time, or access to any open land, despite how obedient they are.
Edit: To be clear, I'm not implying I'm an expert, I have a trainer teaching me to train him, despite years of experience and working at a rescue.
I breed German Shorthaired Pointers for detection work (mostly cash, drugs & explosives) Seeing the development of my pups as the grow into amazing working dogs, fills me with so much pride. I'm so happy to be able to help in some small way, to keep people safe.
These dogs are wonderful. Controlled and very powerful. Years ago I took bites from A German trained male. He was not afraid of anything. Nothing. Afterwards my arm felt like it had been stood upon. I cannot imagine what it would be like without the bite sleeve. The damage would be significant. Yes the dog loves to work. The good ones just want to make their handler happy. Play!
Two questions:
1) what happens to flunked out dogs?
2) next video about the in-field handlers training with the dogs?
They get donated. They are extremely well bred and raised so they always find interested people, even between military themselves.
It's the same when retired.
Depends what area they fail in....if they are great at sniffing drugs but sucks at tracking people, or get injured, they get "reassigned" for other things.
1) Pho
@@weeksweeks9552 oh no xD
There are some videos about in field handlers training with the dogs. You see them sleep with their dogs every night. You see them have bonded. You also see things not seen here as this is like basic. For some dogs they will go and be with a handler through a military drill where there are explosions and loud noises to see if the dog panics and runs because when they said they need them very brave and a lot of go there can be very loud noises in the field including gunfire so if they cower and run then it's a wash. There was one handler who lost his dog after a very long standoff with a man in the Afghanistan war with an insurgent who was dug in. They had exchanged gunfire and believed the insurgent was out of ammo. The dog was sent in to a heavily covered area and while the dog did get the insurgent pinned long enough for the men to come in and get him, he did also stab the dog and when the handler called for the dog and he didn't come back, he knew he was gone. The dog have as much gear on them as the soldiers do and they wear a beacon, but they still were unable to find him. The commander only let them look for so long before he said they needed to leave. There was an entire thing about it on VICE as when a soldier returns home the military would make soldiers promises that when the dogs retires the soldier could have it but the military did NOT make good on those promises. You see one veteran trying to get the dog that almost died with him by asking this man nicely and the man couldn't care less and treated this soldier like crap. You see another be reunited with his dog and he recognizes him right away. It's sad but it goes through more training they have to do as this is in US boot camp for the dogs. BTW My personal opinion is that if the dog retires and the handler is also not currently serving/tours over wants him they should have first dibbs over civilians. As a civilian if you came to my door and said the dog I got from the war you served with and this dog just ran up and pounced on you and started licking you like he knew you there is no way I could keep a veteran from his dog.
I was accidentally bitten by one when I was stationed in Saudi Arabia for the Air Force 😂 Those 🐕 are awesome but also frightening af
Cheers from San Diego California
Srry to head that bro
There was a story on the news about a few months ago here, where iirc two military dogs happened to break open their kennels over night and when in the morning, the care taker went to feed them, he was killed by them.
These dogs were after that assessed to be euthanized or to be able to stay in military work.
But I don't know what the end result was.
Why Saudi Arabia specifically what happened
@@petrescuework-difficultcas6581 They would be euthenissed sadly because of this. Biting without command and even killing is aggression. Aggression for the USA trained dogs means euthenissed
@@instantname3473 It wasn't in the US though but in Germany. Our laws for killing animals are very strict with very high regulation. One bite incident doesn't justify a euthanization by law here.
The potential and athleticism of these dogs is insane
I'm glad I watched this. Mad respect. Thank you for your service
“You’re in the field!” Is so cool to me they’re literally telling the dog hey we’re working now so act professional and they do it😭🤍
cracked me up when the ball came out of the hole. they may be killing machines buy theyre still the goodest bois and grrls
My grandpa trained shepherds at Lackland back during the Vietnam War era. So cool ❤
Anyone that's been around a badass, highly trained dog understand just how much we needed them for our evolution.
Without them we would not have evolved to the top of the food chain
Working Line GSD's out of Europe are AMAZING. herding and farm work by day. Protection work by night. We now have Schutzhund and IPO. When I met with my breeders who are from Europe they could not believe we have kibble in the US or feed it to our dogs. The names with Von ____ Haus is like "from the house of" and you took pride in any dogs you bred and any dogs you raised and trained as they were part of your family and they literally showed me how they cooked for their dogs every single day. They had never seen or heard of kibble before and had always cooked for their dogs and topped the cooked rice, barely, etc and vege's with raw meat.
@@Lizzard2060 It's an actual tragedy... The 80's consumer plunge truely destroyed the at-home markets that this country did best and depended on. Hopefully we're on our way back to small industries in local vicinities producing products by the people for the people.
@@turtlenoheart It destroyed other things as well. Quality being one thing. My father kept clothes from pre 80's and the denim is thick and I wouldn't destroy it in a day and it was common and not what I need to search for in high quality Denim and Duck material now. Same thing with Wool coats. Now we have cheap fast fashion and the clothes rip in one day. People had multiple skills other than their main job. We still do it that way but it's harder and harder and kids raised in apartments and fancy homes didn't know the difference between a nail and a screw. When I was at the gym, they asked me for advice when their fence kept falling over and I have livestock so I've put up many a fence and was even asked if I am a handyman and I don't think I know very much. Lots of people had gardens. Oh, and the GSD's weren't bred to have a slanted back without being posed that way. If you have been to a GSD show recently . . . we don't use American GSD lines for a reason, many have the slant back without placing a foot out, shorter lifespans due to this breeding issue as the hips are gone by 8 yrs old and healthy European imports like mine that have a straight back when just standing and work and live up to 14 yrs. . .and are looked at as weird by American breeders. Similar things are happening in the equine world as well as life expectancy has come down from 30+ yrs of good working time to actually death at 18yrs because we start them too young, some american riders are a bit oversized for their mounts, and we don't put in the care that we should. TB's in particular are having bleeding issues that have never been seen before in the breed. I would also enjoy if we did not have so much Chinese cheap plastic crap.
@@Lizzard2060 I would have loved to read your comment if it was more concise.
Thank you so much for helping me understand all that go's into training working dogs for the military. And for all those working dogs a big WOOF. Thank you for your service,,💜💜💜
I have a self trained Malinois... (THANK YOU YOU TUBE) She's not on these dogs level but she is damn close. Great breed if you have the time and energy for them, and the deep pockets. Most people I do not believe have that time, inclination or energy and would only be getting a home wrecking machine. Frisby induced tennis elbow in two arms in only three years.
Unfortunately people just get a dog based on its looks or "coolness" then never do research.
Neighbor has a husky that just sits in the backyard all day. Those dogs needs space and someone to guide them. And not to mention huskies get bored QUICK. And she makes sure we all know she's bored at 6am in the morning.
@@Narutalia65 bruh I know what you mean
@@Narutalia65 have you asked the owner if they’d allow you to take it for a walk?
@@2K9s walk with your neighbours dog? Its THEIR dog. Lazy peopke in the world get the most exiting breed these days. Its stupid
@@instantname3473 you’re reading my comment incorrectly. If *Favor* is concerned about THEIR neighbor’s husky, asking/offering to take it for a walk might ease their worries and benefit the dog, ie; *Favor* doing something about it. Maybe the owner doesn’t have the required time currently, or is handicapped, etc.. whatever, and wouldn’t mind someone, in this case *Favor* taking THEIR husky for some exercise and stimulation. What’s your issue with this? Do people not talk to their neighbors anymore or offer them assistance?
Make sense?? Anything else?…
Thanks for the awesome Video. We have had a german shepherd that were somewhat trained (by the breeder) but not actively attacking humans. The animals are very intimidating for most people anyway, so training like the above is unnecessary for normal people. But most of the time, these animals will also help you in an emergency, because they just have it in their blood (I've experienced it before). These animals have been bred as guard dogs for decades. But you also have to offer the animal plenty of playtime and exercise, because they just have a lot of power. Unfortunately our dog died last year at the age of 12. Big dogs don't grow old. Anyway, I love these animals and would get one again in a heartbeat. They are very intelligent and also nice to strangers (at least ours back then). Greetings from Germany.
Sorry for your loss brother
Sorry for your loss. Id rather lose people than dogs.
My GSD died at the age of 12 just recently and I haven't been dealing well with the loss. All of my dogs are from the pound and she was severely misused for the first half of her life, which may have shortened her life span. These dogs are amazing and I am sorry for your loss. God bless you for taking one of these wonderful dogs into your heart.
Those dogs are lucky to be where they are. I feel like there's a lot of would-be owners who only want this dog because they saw some video, but won't bother to take the time to actually develop the dog.
This
It’s a huge issue sadly, I do rescue work in my spare time to save these beautiful animals from meeting the fate of the shelters when those pieces of shit give them up.
Exactly. Ppl just think it's the breed that makes them, when it's the breedING. And the training and dedication
Thank you, each and every one of you, for what you do.
Absolutely fantastic work by Military & wonderfully clever dogs. Great teamwork!
My Akita/Shepherd was from breeder/ ex-policeman. As a 6 month old pup her play-fight antics were exceptional, she’d grab your wrist & literarily twist your arm behind your back. Gospel truth. Most of the time she was a sweetie, loving & caring. She died 1 month after my hub. died (he was her special daddy. I was the ‘play toy!).
Miss my girl,
JaneR
Working Line German Shepherd, Belgian Malinois, and Dutch Shepherds(All cousin breeds) are amazing dogs.
These dogs are amazing. God bless them for their services
How cool. I just wanted to add that when they retire these dogs, they do allow you to adopt them. The notices probably don't make it to the public but if you work on a base, they do publicize it if they are available. I'm sure they make great extended family members.
Wow, what GREATLY TRAINED DOGS! John P.
Thank you for what you all do with and for them. They are service members. Please never leave any behind.
Trained dogs in the Military Working Dog Unit. They are such intelligent creatures and they pick up commands fast. Just needed to reinforce every few weeks and they were good to go for operations.
There were two types of dogs. One to train new soldiers dog handling and another for real operations at the air force bases. The operational dogs were vicious.
I was a holdover at Lackland and worked at the kennels a lot while there. They have thousands of dogs there. I never seen so many kennels.
Actually fun fact: most dogs that work in the military ore police have come from the netherlands since the training program that the dutch do with its dogs has been so optimized to preform at highest regard
The dog that took down the leader of ISIS had dutch origin
You show me one of those puppies pulling someones heart out my heart will still melt. Even as a cat person.
I don’t care how much that dog is snarling in the thumbnail, he still looks like a fluffy boy and I must give him a hug with some cuddles
guess your going to learn the hard way lol
Then the dog run up and bite you
a hug with some cuddles?
I actually got my dog from here. You can actually get dogs for retirement at lackland base. His name is Andor and is great.
I worked with the Military dogs when I was in the USAF. I was in the veterinarian service from 72 - 76. We took care of the dogs medical needs. I was stationed on a Minuteman base where we had nuclear ordinance. When i separated I did miss the dogs and the duty.
One of my farmer neighbours breeds fully registered Malinoi's. I wish I was younger. I absolutely love these dogs. 🇿🇦
Our world would stop without dogs!
🌏Dogs do ROCK our world!🌍
13:40 is the best thing that teachers and parents don't understand
Agreed. Parents especially (albeit only some, like mine), are terrible at understanding this
These are my favorite kinds of videos! Please do more!
OH business insider LOVES military videos. Its almost like, they get paid by the military to make these
@@DaddyFatSzack 😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣
Malinois are dogs with unparalleled focus and devotion. To the point they will harm themselves just to do their job. Amazing connection between the handlers and their dogs.
Excellent video. As a former K9 officer with the South African Police love to see working dogs in action. Faithful and Loyal to the end👌👌
we need security teams implemented in every school across America with protection dogs. if you haven’t heard, the officers from the Uvalde shooting were in the school for over an hour while the shooter took likes... these dogs don’t have the fear of taking a bullet.
Yeah but they have handlers who will be afraid, wouldn't change a thing...
The dogs would cost over 50k per school
@@JT89877 Publics schools have government funding
@@zesk6718 they should obviously fix the school education system before putting in guard dogs, or they'll just be protecting kids who'll grow up to be dumber and dumber every generation
My opinion. I know the USA has a large amount of gun crime, but very little regulation of guns (varies depending on the state from what I’ve heard). Why not instead of posting security teams outside every school, draining valuable resources and money, why not regulate guns more strictly? Just my opinion.
You can tell how much these dogs love working. We don’t deserve dogs. They really are the best.
I love how strong the bond is between humans and dogs, you can tell we’ve truly been together for thousands of years ❤
Military dogs are so smart they protect family members as well. I had an MP as a neighbor years ago. He would bring the dog home. We all felt safer knowing his dog was around. A Rottweiler got loose and tried to attack his daughter. That German Shepard sprung into action. He was the neighborhood hero. Even when we came home walking up with groceries he sat and watched us. He knew all of us. He was a gem.
Thank you all for your service. Including the fur soldier ❤️
I used to live near Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio but I did not know they had a program to where they let the residents take the puppies and care for him for 6 months. Awesome idea I'd love to be part of that.. 💞💞
0:30 AH- MY HEART-
THEY'RE SO CUTE
Growing up my dad's best friend was a K9 officer. His dog was a German Shepherd called Cyrus. I remember going to the officer's house all the and playing tug o' war with Cyrus. Sadly, a year after he was retired Cyrus got cancer and was put down. Broke all of our hearts.
Soo much training. Impressive, both the dogs and the trainers.
Those puppies are adorable. It would be so hard to turn a foster back over to the program after we’d raised it for 7 months. That’s how many working dogs are trained though.
Right? XD I would want to keep them forever haha
Overwhelming to think that a few of my GSD pups were trained there and are serving for the US Military - bless the brave pups, Momma is now retired and living her best life as a pet :) greetings from germany!
Getting a dog to bite is simple. Getting him to stop is hard. These trainers are impressive.
I miss my working k9! I wish I would have been able to keep him once I got out of the USAF. Now, I have a goodest boy GSD named Lando and he's my heart. These dogs are amazing and perform such feats. Definitely great dogs!
We thank God for creating Dogs for us
I remember working with handlers while deployed! It was really cool!
Thankyou for your service and thankyou for being such good boys and girls
It’s amazing how smart these dogs are
that was THE GOODEST of puppy Jumpscare in youtube history :)))))
I couldn’t contain myself when I saw the puppies ❤
I was so proud whenever the dogs completed a task
My late nan's dad had a pure white german shepard during ww2 when he was in the military police and my nan said the memories she had of rex(she was born in 51) was that he was a very loveable and friendly dog with people but always very obedient.
love that you guys showed them getting love from the handlers
This is one of the coolest videos on UA-cam
I could watch this every day they work so hard😮love 😘 it
I train at Lackland Airforce Base in 1979, Dog Handler's School, and we trained Sentry Dogs; Bomb Detection, and Drug Dogs, as well as Patrol Dogs that assisted in Special Opps Units Tracking down Terrorist over seas, My Dog was named "Ugly" and he was so fierce, I had to train alone because he would attack almost everyone who came within his space!!! Great Dog without a doubt or contradiction!!! (T.S.U.) S. Korea!!!
Who would’ve thought those tiny cute bundles of fur will turn out to be cold bodied police dogs 😂
cried when i saw the puupies, they have a big smart future ahead of them, future heros
Ngl this was kinda informative, I actually wanna enlist in the army as a K-9 unit this honestly looks really fun, and I have always grown up liking dogs, I’ve always wanted to train my dog in which I’m working on now.