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    552nd MPs search for explosives in Mosul

    552nd MP's search for explosives in Mosul

    Photo By Sgt. Patrick Lair | Sgt. Angela Mathern and her bomb-sniffing dog Vinny, both of the 51st Military Police...... read more read more

    Multi-National Division – North PAO

    Story and photos by Sgt. Patrick Lair
    115th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment

    MOSUL, Iraq— U.S. military police in northern Iraq are developing new tactics in an attempt to counter insurgent violence in the Ninewah provincial capital city of Mosul.

    In February, the 552nd Military Police Company, based out of Schofield Barracks, Hawaii, working with military canine handlers, began conducting a series of random traffic searches in downtown Mosul for vehicles transporting explosives.

    "If we get detection dogs and start actively seeking them out, it denies the enemy the capability of bringing them out," said Sgt. 1st Class Michael Ford, platoon sergeant for 1st Platoon, speaking of the explosive materials often used by insurgents to create improvised bombs in houses and roadways.

    On Jan. 24, the issue was brought to a head when an estimated 20,000 tons of insurgent explosives detonated in a three-story building in downtown Mosul, resulting in death and injury to multiple Iraqi civilians.

    "The goal here is to deny the enemy that availability of supplies," said Ford, now on his third combat deployment to the city of Mosul.

    On a recent outing, Sgt. Angela Mathern, a canine handler with the 501st Military Police Detachment, based out of Fort Lewis, Wash., accompanied Vinnie, an explosives dog, in his search of vehicles at downtown intersections.

    "I let Vinnie do his thing. He's the expert on it all," she said of the three-year-old black lab she's trained with for nearly a year. "I'm the expert on handling him. My eyes are always on my dog."

    Both Mathern and Ford said the searches are just another way coalition troops are working to bring security to the city of around 1.7 million residents.

    "This is just something else we can do to help out in our area," Ford said.

    "Our basic mission here is to save lives," Mathern said. "Whenever people ask me why I do this job, I tell them I'm saving lives every time I go out."

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 02.26.2008
    Date Posted: 02.26.2008 09:57
    Story ID: 16721
    Location: MOSUL, IQ

    Web Views: 164
    Downloads: 120

    PUBLIC DOMAIN