Monday, October 25, 2010

Let Loose the Dogs of War!


From Wired magazine comes this little nugget about cost-effectiveness in the War on Terror:

Drones, metal detectors, chemical sniffers, and super spycams -- forget ‘em. The leader of the Pentagon’s multibillion military task force to stop improvised bombs says there’s nothing in the U.S. arsenal for bomb detection more powerful than a dog’s nose.

Despite a slew of bomb-finding gagdets, the American military only locates about 50 percent of the improvised explosives planted in Afghanistan and Iraq. But that number jumps to 80 percent when U.S. and Afghan patrols take dogs along for a sniff-heavy walk. “Dogs are the best detectors,” Lieutenant General Michael Oates, the commander of the Joint Improvised Explosive Device Defeat Organization, told a conference yesterday, National Defense reports. That’s not the greatest admission for a well-funded organization — nearly $19 billion since 2004 [funding DARPA’s budget since 2004], according to a congressional committee — tasked with solving one of the military’s wickedest problems.

No word yet on whether dogs are more fiscally-efficient at reducing IED attacks than removing all our troops from Iraq, stopping all funding to Pakistan, and ending all economic and military support for Israel.
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