Originally published Monday, October 20, 2008 at 12:00 AM
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Soldier's adopted pup airlifted out of Baghdad
Ratchet the Iraqi puppy finally had his day. An animal-rescue group flew into Baghdad on Sunday and picked up the dog, which was adopted...
The Associated Press
BAGHDAD — Ratchet the Iraqi puppy finally had his day.
An animal-rescue group flew into Baghdad on Sunday and picked up the dog, which was adopted by Army Spc. Gwen Beberg, 28, of Minneapolis, in a case that highlighted military rules barring service members from caring for pets while in Iraq.
Ratchet was loaded onto a charter flight that took off Sunday night for Kuwait. He's due in Minnesota later this week.
It was the third try by Operation Baghdad Pups to get Ratchet out of the country on behalf of Beberg, who says she couldn't have made it through her 13-month deployment without the affectionate mutt.
She and another soldier rescued the puppy from a burning pile of trash in May.
Beberg's quest to get the dog has gained international attention. More than 65,000 people from Illinois to Italy have signed an online petition urging the Army to let the puppy go to the United States.
The U.S. military has said the dog could leave Iraq but American troops could not provide the transportation.
"We're happy the SPCA has made arrangements for his safe travel to the U.S.; we hope he has a long, happy, fruitful life there," military spokesman Lt. Col. Paul Swiergosz said.
Beberg initially tried to send him with a military convoy from her base south of Baghdad to the airport for an Oct. 1 pickup. But the playful black dog with a touch of white on his nose, chest and paws was reportedly confiscated by an Army officer and sent back.
Baghdad Pups, a U.S. rescue program run by the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals International, tried again Wednesday but was unable to get Ratchet to a flight that took off with six other dogs.
On Sunday, a private security firm collected Ratchet from the small base, put him into a pet carrier and transported him to the airport on Baghdad's western outskirts.
Baghdad Pups coordinator Terri Crisp then took custody and boarded him on the charter. The effort will cost an estimated $5,000, according to the SPCA.
Beberg has been transferred to another military base to prepare for her departure from Iraq next month.
Her mother said bonding with the 6-month-old puppy was a lifesaver for her daughter. "He has been her emotional support, confidante, sanity-saver and a connection with something other than a war zone," Patricia Beberg said Sunday in a telephone interview.
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
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