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Caesar the War Dog 2

Page 19

by Stephen Dando-Collins


  ‘Let’s hope the boy learns his lesson,’ said Nan, beginning to clear the breakfast table.

  ‘Oh, I think a few people in the Corbett household have learned a lesson or two,’ said Ben, smiling at Charlie. ‘Just remember, kids, if anyone bullies you in future, online or in person, you tell a grown-up right away – Nan or me or a teacher. Don’t let it go on.’

  ‘Roger to that,’ Charlie concurred.

  ‘Yes, Dad,’ Josh agreed.

  ‘I promise,’ Maddie pledged seriously.

  ‘Looks like our little family is back on an even keel,’ Ben said, putting his arms affectionately around Josh and Maddie.

  ‘I wish Caesar was here,’ said Maddie, pushing her cereal bowl away. ‘He’s part of our family, too.’

  ‘You know the quarantine regulations, Maddie,’ said Charlie. ‘Caesar has to stay in Tarin Kowt for now.’

  ‘And I’ll be back with Caesar soon,’ Ben added.

  ‘This GRRR thing,’ said Josh, ‘will it mean you’ll only do special missions in Afghanistan?’

  ‘No, mate,’ Charlie answered. ‘We could be sent anywhere in the world at any time.’

  ‘Cool. Can I tell Hanna?’ asked Josh. ‘Or is it top-secret stuff?’

  ‘Hanna?’ Ben shot Nan a questioning glance.

  Nan smiled. ‘Josh and Hanna Park have become good friends while you’ve been away.’

  ‘Ah.’ Ben paused for a moment to think. ‘I’ll clear it with Dr Park first, but I’m sure he’ll be okay with you telling Hanna about GRRR. I think both you and Maddie have proven that you can keep vital secrets.’

  ‘Yes,’ said Maddie, pleased with herself. ‘I only oopsed once.’

  Ben frowned. ‘You what, Princess?’

  Maddie looked guiltily to Josh for help.

  ‘That’s our vital secret, Dad,’ said Josh, with a wink at Maddie.

  ‘Okay,’ Ben returned with a grin.

  After just two days at home, Ben returned to Tarin Kowt to rejoin Caesar, who was so excited to see him that Ben let him sleep beside his bed on his first night back. The next morning, Ben and Caesar were out on their routine jog around the base’s running track when Ben’s mobile buzzed. Coming to a stop, he took out his phone. Caller unknown. Noticing Ben’s absence, Caesar turned around and trotted over to him.

  Curious, Ben put the phone to his ear. ‘This is Ben Fulton.’

  ‘Hello, Sergeant Fulton.’ Ben recognised the voice as belonging to Liberty Lee. ‘I have a message for you. The message is: Rice for water.’

  Ben smiled and ended the call. GRRR had its first mission. Ben knelt down beside Caesar. ‘Sounds like we’re needed, mate.’

  With his tail wagging, Caesar looked up at Ben with an expression that seemed to say, Ready for action when you are, boss. Let’s go!

  STRIKE FORCE BLUE DRAGON

  SKY TEAM

  Sergeant Charlie Grover VC, SASR, team commander

  Sergeant Ben Fulton, SOER, deputy team commander and EDD handler

  Sergeant Angus Bruce, British Royal Marine Commandos, explosives expert

  Corporal Casper Mortenson, Danish Army Hunter Corps, expert underwater diver

  Corporal Chris Banner, British Royal Navy Special Boat Service, small boats expert

  Corporal Lucky Mertz, SASR

  Trooper ‘Bendigo Baz’, SASR

  EDD Caesar, SOER

  LAND TEAM

  Sergeant Duke Hazard, US Green Berets, team commander

  Sergeant Tim McHenry, US Army Rangers, deputy team commander

  Sergeant Jean-Claude Lyon, French Foreign Legion

  Corporal Brian Cisco, US Green Berets, signaller

  Corporal Mars Lazar, US Green Berets, EDD handler

  Private Toushi Harada, Aki Haru, Japanese Self-Defence Force, technical warfare expert

  Private Wilhelm ‘Willy’ Wolf, German Kommando Spezialkräfte, combat medic

  EDD Alabama, US Green Berets

  Ali Moon, civilian, interpreter

  DSRV-801X, THE PENCIL

  Commander Dave Renzo, US Navy

  Lieutenant Brad Ellerman, US Navy

  HOSTAGES

  Dr Park Chun Ho, Secretary-General of the United Nations

  Captain Liberty Lee, Republic of Korea Armed Forces, the secretary-general’s bodyguard

  Captain Rix, German Air Force, UN helicopter pilot

  Lieutenant Frankel, German Air Force, UN helicopter co-pilot

  Jeremy Brown, British, the secretary-general’s principal private secretary

  Mikashi, Japanese, the secretary-general’s press officer

  Fader, Danish, a UN official

  Loubet, French, a UN official

  LIST OF MILITARY TERMS

  2IC second-in-command

  AEW&C airborne early warning and control aircraft, such as the Wedgetail used by the RAAF’s No. 2 Squadron

  Air Force One the US Air Force aircraft that carries the President of the United States of America

  ANA Afghan National Army

  Apache, AH-64 twin-engine helicopter gunship

  bears military intelligence personnel

  Black Hawk, S-70A military helicopter used as a gunship as well as a cargo and troop carrier

  Bushmaster Australian-made troop-carrying vehicle, four-wheel drive; can carry eight troops plus a crew of two

  carbine rifle with a shorter barrel than an assault rifle

  Chinook, CH-47 twin-rotor medium-lift military helicopter that carries cargo, vehicles and troops

  CIA Central Intelligence Agency; America’s overseas spy agency

  clicks kilometres

  copy that ‘I have received’ or ‘I understand’

  Diggers nickname for Australian soldiers

  doggles protective goggles for war dogs

  drone unmanned military aircraft used for reconnaissance and bombing raids

  DSRV deep submersible research (or rescue) vessel

  DZ drop zone

  EDD explosive detection dog

  ETD estimated time of departure

  extraction pickup of troops from hostile territory by air, land or sea

  fixed-wing aircraft any aircraft that relies on wings for lift, as opposed to a helicopter

  fly boys aircrew

  forward operating base (FOB) a base in enemy territory

  frag shell fragments from an exploding artillery shell, grenade, bomb or missilev

  French Foreign Legion French Army unit used for special operations. Traditionally accepts foreigners without asking questions

  Galaxy, C-5 four-engine jet military aircraft, the largest in use within the US Air Force

  Globemaster, C-17 four-engine jet heavy transport aircraft used to rapidly deploy troops, combat vehicles including tanks, heavy equipment and helicopters over long distances

  Green Berets unofficial name of the US Army Special Forces, because they all wear a green beret

  HALO high altitude low opening; parachute jump from high altitude followed by freefall, with the parachute opening at low altitude

  heelo helicopter, also written as ‘helo’

  Hercules, C-130 four-engine, propeller-driven military transport aircraft similar to but smaller than the Globemaster, pronounced ‘Her-kew-leez’ and often referred to as ‘Herc’

  hostiles enemy fighters

  Humvee American military vehicle, four-wheel drive

  Hunter Corps the special forces unit of the Royal Danish Army

  ID identification

  IED improvised explosive device or homemade bomb

  insertion secret landing of troops behind enemy lines

  insurgent guerrilla fighter who does not use a regular military uniform or tactics and who blends in with the local population

  intel intelligence information

  ISAF International Security Assistance Force, i
n Afghanistan

  jumpmaster aircraft crew member who supervises parachutists

  kal an Afghan farm compound, pronounced ‘karl’ and also sometimes spelt ‘qal’

  Kommando Spezialkräfte (KSK) elite German military special operations force

  loadmaster crew member in charge of cargo and passengers in military cargo aircraft and helicopters

  LZ landing zone

  M-16 American-made 5.56 mm assault rifle

  M1 Abrams tank main battle tank of the US and Australian armies

  malek a neutral Afghan envoy trusted by both sides

  mess, the a place where troops gather to eat in a military camp

  met meteorological; weather

  MP5 German-made compact Heckler & Koch MPF 9 mm submachine gun

  MRE meal, ready-to-eat; a sealed military ration pack of pre-cooked food

  NCO non-commissioned officer; a rank in the Australian Army between private and warrant officer, including sergeant, lance corporal and corporal

  op(s) military operation(s)

  operator Australian SAS Regiment soldier

  point the most forward position in a patrol

  puppy Peltors protective earmuffs for war dogs

  RAAF Royal Australian Air Force

  roger ‘yes’ or ‘I acknowledge’

  round bullet

  Royal Marine Commandos commando unit of the British Navy’s Royal Marines

  RPG rocket-propelled grenade

  secure comms communications that can’t be intercepted

  seek on a handler’s instruction to an EDD to find explosives

  Special Air Service Regiment (SASR) elite Special Forces unit in the Australian Army

  Special Boat Service (SBS) a special operations unit of Britain’s Royal Navy, specialising in small boat ops

  Special Operations Engineer Regiment (SOER) Australian Special Forces unit that specialises in military engineering and that trains and operates EDDs

  special ops special operations or secret missions

  Spitfire British World War Two fighter aircraft

  trooper lowest rank in the SASR, the equivalent of a private in other army units

  USAF United States Air Force

  VC Victoria Cross for Australia, the highest-ranking Australian military medal for gallantry

  Zero Hour the time set down by military for an operation to begin

  FACT FILE

  Notes from the Author

  If you have read the first book in this series, Caesar the War Dog, you will know that a real war dog named Caesar served with Anzac troops during the First World War (1914–18). That Caesar, a New Zealand bulldog, searched for wounded men and carried water to them. Another war dog named Caesar, a black labrador–kelpie cross, served with Australian forces during the Vietnam War as an Australian Army tracker dog.

  The fictional Caesar in this book is based on several real dogs of moden times – Sarbi, Endal and Cairo – and their exploits. Here are a few more facts about the real dogs, people, military units, places and equipment that appear in this book and inspired the stories in this series.

  EXPLOSIVE DETECTION DOGS (EDDs)

  The Australian Imperial Force used dogs during the First World War, primarily to carry messages. Sarbi was preceded by a long line of sniffer dogs used by the Australian Army to detect land mines during the Korean War (1950–53) and, later, in the Vietnam War. In 1981, the current explosive detection dog program was introduced by the army’s Royal Australian Engineer Corps, whose base is adjacent to Holsworthy Army Barracks in New South Wales. In 2005, Australian EDDs were sent to Afghanistan for the first time. A number have served there since and several have been killed or wounded in action.

  SARBI

  Sarbi, whose service number is EDD 436, is a black female labrador serving with the Australian Army. She began the EDD training program in June 2005 and graduated from the ninteen-week training course with Corporal D, joining the Australian Army’s top-secret Incident Response Regiment (IRR) – now the Special Operations Engineer Regiment (SOER) – whose main job was to counter terrorist threats. In 2006, Sarbi and Corporal D were part of the security team at the Commonwealth Games in Melbourne. In April 2007, the pair was sent to Afghanistan for a seven-month deployment, returning to Afghanistan for their second tour of duty the following year.

  On 2 September 2008, Sarbi and Corporal D were members of a Special Forces operation launched from a forward operating base a hundred kilometres northeast of Tarin Kowt. The operation went terribly wrong when five Humvees carrying Australian, American and Afghan troops were ambushed by a much larger Taliban force. In the ensuing battle, Corporal D was seriously wounded and became separated from Sarbi, who was also injured. Nine of the twelve Australians involved were wounded, as was their Afghan interpreter. Several American soldiers were also wounded in the battle. So began Sarbi’s time lost in Taliban territory, a saga imagined in the first book of the Caesar the War Dog series.

  After being ‘missing in action’ for thirteen months, Sarbi was wrangled back into friendly hands by a US Special Forces soldier. A month later, Sarbi and Corporal D were reunited at Tarin Kowt, in front of the Australian Prime Minister and the commanding US general in Afghanistan. Sarbi is the most decorated dog in the history of the Australian military, having been awarded all the medals that Caesar receives in Caesar the War Dog.

  ENDAL

  Endal was a sandy-coloured male labrador who was trained by the UK charity Canine Partners. He went on to qualify as a service dog and, in the late 1990s, was partnered with Allen Parton, a former Chief Petty Officer with Britain’s Royal Navy. Confined to a wheelchair from injuries sustained during the Gulf War, initially Allen couldn’t speak, so he taught Endal more than a hundred commands using hand signals.

  In 2009, Endal suffered a stroke and had to be put down. During his lifetime, Endal became famous in Britain, receiving much media coverage and many awards for his dedicated and loyal service to his master. A young labrador named EJ (Endal Junior) took Endal’s place as Allen Parton’s care dog.

  CAIRO

  Cairo is a long-nosed Belgian Malinois shepherd with the United States Navy SEALs (Sea, Air and Land teams), a unit within the US Special Operations Command. He was trained for insertion by helicopter, and by parachute, strapped to his handler, just like Caesar is in this book. In 2011, Cairo was part of SEAL Team 6, which landed by helicopter in a compound in Pakistan to deal with Osama bin Laden, the leader of the terrorist organisation Al Qaeda. Cairo’s job was to go in first to locate explosives in the compound. Cairo and all members of his team returned safely from the successful mission.

  AUSTRALIAN MILITARY INVOLVEMENT IN AFGHANISTAN

  In 2001, the Australian Government sent SAS troops to participate in coalition operations in Afghanistan following Al Qaeda attacks in America. Although those Australian troops were withdrawn in 2002, Australia resumed its military involvement in Afghanistan as part of ISAF in 2005. By 2012, Australia had 1500 troops in Afghanistan, the largest military presence of any foreign nation other than members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO). Most of these Australian troops have been based in Uruzgan Province, and some in Kandahar Province, and have been involved in reconstruction programs, rebuilding destroyed or run-down infrastructure in Afghanistan, the training of the Afghan National Army, and logistical support to ISAF forces. In addition, 300 members of the Australian contingent have been SAS operators and commandos from 1 and 2 Commando Regiments, involved in special operations against the Taliban and other anti-government militias.

  SPECIAL AIR SERVICE REGIMENT (SASR)

  The original Special Air Service was created by the British Army during the Second World War for special operations behind enemy lines, with the motto of ‘Who Dares Wins’. In 1957, the Australian Army created its own Special Air Service Regiment, commonly referred
to as the Australian SAS, two years after the New Zealand Army founded its Special Air Service.

  Australia’s SAS is considered by many to be the finest Special Forces unit in the world, and its members help train Special Forces of other countries, including those of the United States of America.

  The top-secret regiment is based at Campbell Barracks at Swanbourne, in Perth, Western Australia. Because its men are often involved in covert anti-terrorist work, their names and faces cannot be revealed. The only exception to this rule is SAS members who receive the Victoria Cross. The unit is divided into three squadrons, with one squadron always on anti-terrorist duty and the others deployed on specific missions.

  During the war in Afghanistan, Australian EDDs and their handlers have frequently worked with Australian SAS and commando units on special operations.

  BAND-e-AZHDAHAR

  Band-e-Azhdahar, or Dragon Lake, really exists in Afghanistan’s Bamiyan Province, although Deep Cave was my invention.

  THE TALIBAN

  The Taliban is an armed political movement that originated in southeast Afghanistan and is confined to Afghan tribes that speak the Pashto language. In late 2001, foreign coalition troops joined Afghan Northern Alliance forces in driving Taliban and Al Qaeda fighters out of Afghanistan, after which an elected Afghan Government was established in the country.

  Since then, Taliban forces, reinforced by other anti-ISAF militias and extremist Muslim fighters from many countries, and operating from mountainous regions of eastern Afghanistan and western Pakistan, have waged a fierce insurgent war against the Afghan Government and ISAF forces.

  THE PENCIL

  The Pencil is based on a real mini-submarine built for the US Navy SEALs. Originally, it was intended to build twelve of these, but only the prototype was constructed, launched and tested. Due to its exorbitant cost, no more were built. The prototype was damaged in a fire, and retired. Just like the Pencil, this mini-sub had a crew of two, could carry sixteen passengers, and its hull was four times as strong as that of an ordinary submarine.

  ZOOMERS

  Charlie’s high-tech Zoomers are based on real prosthetic ‘blades’ used by athletes.

  THE UNITED NATIONS (UN)

 

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