1st Military Working Dog Regiment explained

Unit Name:1st Military Working Dog Regiment, RAVC
Dates:2010–present
Country: United Kingdom
Size:284 regular personnel, 112 reservists, and 125 military working dogs.
Command Structure:8th Engineer Brigade
Garrison:St George's Barracks, North Luffenham
Garrison Label:Regimental Headquarters
Motto:Vires in Varietate - Strength in Diversity
Battles:Iraq War
War in Afghanistan
Website:Regimental webpage

The 1st Military Working Dog Regiment, Royal Army Veterinary Corps is a British Army working dog unit. It is responsible for providing trained dogs and handlers to support British Armed Forces on operations in the UK and overseas.The regiment holds the Army’s only deployable MWD and veterinary capability.

The regiment was formed on 26 March 2010, and its headquarters is located at St George's Barracks, North Luffenham.

History

The 1st Military Working Dog Regiment was established in 2010 to command the Army's five military working dog support units. Until the regimental headquarters had been established, these units were independent.[1] [2]

Deployments

Cyprus

The Cyprus Military Working Dog Troop is based at Episkopi Garrison and provides protection tasks, vehicle search tasks and arms and explosives search tasks.[3]

Afghanistan

The regiment was deployed to Afghanistan on Operation Herrick, carrying out a range of tasks in theatre that included patrolling the bases where fellow British soldiers were based, searching vehicles at checkpoints and going out on patrol on the front line.[4] At Camp Bastion, the main UK base in Helmand Province, the dogs were housed in air-conditioned kennels, which also had heating for the cold winter nights, and each dog had a run area and covered sleeping area in their individual kennel. When based out of forward operating bases, the dogs slept with their handlers.[5] Numerous working dogs from 1MWD have received the Dickin Medal for conspicuous gallantry or devotion to duty while serving in Afghanistan.[6] [7] [8]

Mali

The regiment supported Operation Newcombe in Mali, deploying with a High Assurance Search Dog Team.[9]

Fall of Kabul

During the fall of Kabul, the regiment deployed eight teams and one veterinary officer as part of an Air Manoeuvre Battle Group from 16 Air Assault Brigade Combat Team in August 2021. The teams engaged in crowd control at Kabul International Airport and also patrolled the airport perimeter and deployed specialist arms explosives search teams to search a large volume of baggage.[10]

Roles

The regiment forms part of 29 (Explosive Ordnance Disposal and Search) Group, under 8th Engineer Brigade.[11] Each military working dog has a name, service number, health and training record, and assigned military veterinarian. The dogs, handlers, and vets are trained at the Defence Animal Training Regiment.[12]

Arms Explosive Search

1MWD utilise AES dogs, primarily Labradors and Spaniels, to provide commanders with additional assurance during routine patrolling or deliberate strike operations and allow freedom of movement. They can be used to search urban and rural areas, buildings, compounds, vehicles, routes, roads, railways, and personal effects to detect the presence of weapons, explosives, and ammunition. AES can assist in searching at vehicle check points (VCP), incident control points (ICP), helicopter landing sites (HLS), and cordon positions.

High Assurance Search

1MWD utilise HAS dogs, primarily Belgian Malinois, within a Defence Advanced Search Team. They provide the detection capability of Improvised Explosive Devices during high-risk search operations, delivering a high intensity slow and systematic search of given areas, routes, train lines, vulnerable points and areas, and compound exteriors.

Patrol

1MWD utilise Patrol dogs, primarily Belgian Malinois and German Shepherds, as a Force Protection asset, providing commanders with a high-profile visual deterrent that can detect, pursue, and detain an intruder with sub-lethal force. Patrol dogs use their superior visual, audio, and olfactory senses to highlight the presence of enemy forces or unidentified personnel within an area of responsibility. They can be employed as static or patrolling sentry, within an ambush, crowd control or as an escort for detainees.

Vehicle Search

1MWD utilise VS dogs, primarily Spaniels, at main entry points to installations and barracks or on deliberate VCP operations to search all types of vehicle platforms for the presence of weapons, explosives, and ammunition. Furthermore, they can search motorbikes, cars, lorries, aircraft, ships or containers and any contents within (personal belongings, freight, cargo).

Structure

The regiment currently comprises the following sub-units:

Future

By 2026, the regiment will relocate to Kendrew Barracks in Cottesmore, Rutland. 1MWD will be based alongside 1st and 2nd Battalions Royal Anglian Regiment and 7 Regiment RLC. To enable their relocation, 15 new buildings will be constructed on the site, including a veterinary centre, kennels, accommodation blocks, squadron offices, gym, and training facilities. This is expected to complete in December 2025, to enable the permanent disposal of St George's Barracks in 2026.[17]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Military working dogs parade as a newly formed regiment . 25 December 2011 . British Army.
  2. News: Chesshyre. Robert. Dogs of war: sniffer dogs lead the way in Afghanistan. 25 December 2011. The Telegraph. 20 January 2011.
  3. Web site: Melbourne . Sian Grzeszczyk . 2020-10-08 . Inside The Cyprus Military Working Dog Troop At Episkopi Garrison . 2024-08-25 . www.forcesnews.com . en.
  4. Web site: Working dog unit returns from Afghanistan . 2024-08-25 . GOV.UK . en.
  5. Web site: Military working dogs deploy to Afghanistan . 2024-08-25 . GOV.UK . en.
  6. News: 2020-08-28 . Medal for hero dog Kuno which saved soldiers' lives in Afghanistan . 2024-08-25 . BBC News . en-GB.
  7. News: MacAskill . 2014-04-28 . British army dog awarded bravery medal for work in Afghanistan . 2024-08-25 . The Guardian . en-GB . 0261-3077.
  8. Web site: 2013-10-25 . Four military dogs killed in action in Afghanistan . 2024-08-25 . The Telegraph . en.
  9. Web site: 25 August 2024 . 1st Military Working Dog Regiment The British Army . army.mod.uk.
  10. Web site: Wharton . James . 2022-08-13 . The dogs of Op Pitting: One year on . 2024-08-25 . www.forcesnews.com . en.
  11. Web site: 25 August 2024 . Future Soldier Guide - adr010310-futuresoldierguide_30nov.pdf . 47.
  12. News: 2023-07-24 . Army dogs should be better protected, says former handler . 2024-08-25 . BBC News . en-GB.
  13. Web site: A focus on: 101 Military Working Dog Squadron . 2024-08-25 . East Midlands RFCA . en.
  14. Web site: 11 July 2019 . 1st Military Working Dog Regiment Tackle Commanders Canine Challenge The British Army . army.mod.uk.
  15. Web site: 3 August 2019 . Members of 103 (HQ &Sp... - 1st Military Working Dog Regiment Facebook . 2024-08-25 . www.facebook.com.
  16. Web site: Melbourne . Sian Grzeszczyk . 2020-10-08 . Inside The Cyprus Military Working Dog Troop At Episkopi Garrison . 2024-08-25 . www.forcesnews.com . en.
  17. Web site: Working dogs’ regiment to relocate as contract awarded for refurbishment of Kendrew Barracks . 2024-08-25 . GOV.UK . en.