The Sunday Telegraph

Scores of horses and dogs put down after military service in world’s trouble spots

- By Sean Rayment

ALMOST 1,300 British military dogs have been destroyed by Army vets after serving in war zones around the world, The Telegraph can reveal.

The dogs responsibl­e for protecting troops against attacks by insurgents as well as sniffing out buried bobby traps were put down after falling ill or because they were regarded as being too fierce to rehome.

Some fit dogs were euthanised for “failing to maintain standards” and “welfare reasons”, while others were destroyed after being described as “old and worn out”. In 2020 six dogs were put down for being an “unacceptab­le risk to safety”.

Military vets also euthanised 309 horses after they became ill or lame, although some were also destroyed because they had become too dangerous to handle.

Horses are used by the Household Cavalry Regiment and the King’s Troop Royal Horse Artillery.

Two military horses that suffered serious injuries after running loose through London now look set to recover from their wounds but the Ministry of Defence has said that it is too early to say whether they will return to duties.

Seven horses and six soldiers from the Household Cavalry were on an extended exercise in Belgravia last Wednesday when the horses were spooked by builders moving rubble.

Four service personnel were thrown from their horses and four of the animals, named Vida, Trojan, Quaker and Tennyson, got loose, smashing into vehicles, including a double-decker bus and causing a number of injuries.

Meanwhile defence sources have said that many of the dogs killed for safety reasons over the last two decades were trained as protection animals and taught to be aggressive when in “working mode”.

One serving dog handler said: “Any dog trained to be aggressive is effectivel­y being given a death sentence because they are almost impossible to rehome.”

The figures from a series of Freedom of Informatio­n requests by The Tele

graph show that between 2002 and January 2019 up to 1,200 dogs were destroyed and a further 78 dogs were put down between 2019 and 2022.

The figures for the number of dogs destroyed last year have not yet been released by the Ministry of Defence.

Dogs are used by all three of the Armed Forces and have become a key part of special forces operations, being used extensivel­y in Iraq, Afghanista­n and Syria. Both the Special Air Service and the Special Boat Service canine teams use the Belgian Malinois, a highly intelligen­t and fearless animal trained to be both aggressive and agile.

Dogs have also been used to detect explosives, often buried beneath the ground and were responsibl­e for saving the lives of hundreds of soldiers during the 20-year-long war in Afghanista­n.

Four dogs in Afghanista­n won the Dickin Medal – the animal version of the Victoria Cross – including a labrador called Sadie, which saved lives by spotting a bomb in 2005.

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