I see a picture, and I just can’t figure out…

I’m sure there’s some really logical reason for these people to be doing this. I’m convinced of it. For the life of me, though, I can’t guess what it might be.
And I might be wrong, but those look like two of the unhappiest dogs I’ve ever seen.
















































Totally guessing, but considering no magazines in magazine wells, maybe a wounded partner extraction exercise?
also, muzzles installed on the dogs. This is most likely done when the dog is especially distressed and presents a danger to the handler. Such as in a wounded partner extraction?
I know that military parachuting dogs are muzzled because dogs rarely enjoy being flung out of airplanes.
http://www.planetdogblog.com/.a/6a00e55221a35088330168e94241c4970c-pi
I actually knew a man whose military duty included forcing very reluctant parachute-equipped sled dogs out the door of Air Force Rescue planes.
The only reason I can imagine those dogs being strapped behind the soldier like that is so they can share the benefit of their master’s chest armor.
Makes some sense when the men and dogs are jumping out of aircraft, but I can’t see too much logic in carrying dogs like that. At least, if it is for training, they could get smaller dogs! Bet the two soldiers shown have serious back aches when they’re done.
At least, if it is for training, they could get smaller dogs!
I’d think they’d want *bigger* dogs for training purposes. That would make actual deployment easier. Training with lighter equipment than you’d use in the field would mean you’d be unlikely to be able to handle the real thing when needed.
-pssst- Hey, Joel…
Heh.
Ben, HALO?
Tracey: When you can’t run, you crawl, and when you can’t crawl – when you can’t do that…
Zoë: You find someone to carry you.
“We are Diamond Dogs” ~ Venom Snake, Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain