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Operation Baghdad Pups - Success Stories

Through the Operation Baghdad Pups program, SPCA International has rescued the dogs and cats of over 100 U.S. service members who were deployed in the Middle East.  Each has a compelling, uplifting story; however, due to security concerns we cannot share all of them online.  We encourage you to read the stories below and check back often for updates.  You also may want to visit the Rescue Missions photo gallery to see the faces of all of the patriot pets rescued through this vital program.


Lady

If Lady hadn't been rescued before the airline summer heat embargos began on June 1st, she surely would have died on the harsh, hot streets of Iraq.  SPCA International secured Lady's emergency exit from Iraq just in the nick of time. Lt. John is almost home from Iraq and his mother, Mary, has been caring for Lady until he returns. Read more...

FERGIE

Fergie is a special pup who was befriended and loved by a group of soldiers in Iraq during 2010 and 2011.  When the soldiers were told they’d be redeployed home, they couldn’t bear the thought of leaving Fergie behind to fend for herself on the harsh streets of Iraq. This is an email we received from one soldier’s wife shortly after Fergie arrived in her new home. Read more...

HONOR

After a month of missions SPCA International is thrilled to report that we have successfully brought back 18 dogs and 6 cats to their forever homes!  This brings the total amount of animals brought to the US by Operation Baghdad Pups to 313!  We received a heartwarming email from “Honor’s” Dad, and would like to share it with you here.  Read more...

DAISY

Life for people and animals in Iraq is dangerously precarious. Unexpected events that can forever alter someone’s existence are an everyday reality. Two soldiers and a dog experienced this when a chain of events was put in motion and their worlds overlapped. Sergeant Steven Christofferson was killed in Iraq on April 21, 2008. Read more...


ONE EYE

The name One Eye, suggests that this Iraqi cat has a limited view of the world around him. But in fact, he has two eyes. Born on an isolated military outpost near the border with Jordan, One Eye and his littermates were abandoned at a very young age. Several kindhearted Marines stumbled across the orphans and decided to give it a shot at being surrogate dads. Read more...


PACHINO

Sgt. Daniel Schaefer and his fellow soldiers serving in Iraq found Pachino as a tinny puppy.  Hurt and abandoned, they could not bear to leave him for dead, so they dressed his wounds and nursed him back to health.  Soon, Pachino became a welcome friend to the soldiers as they taught him to fetch and horsed around with the playful pup.  Read more...


WOBBLES

Wobbles is a cat that had special reasons to need the help of Operation Baghdad Pups and the friends she made while living in Iraq. She was born in November 2007, on the compound of a private U.S. security firm in Baghdad, Iraq. Discovered under a trailer by one of the security company employees, she and her only other surviving littermate were in bad shape. Read more...


PHOENIX

There is a Joint Security Stations (JSS) in Iraq that is austere at best. A small building at this location is where eight U.S. soldiers live. There is no PX, post office or chow hall. Meals are trucked in from the nearest Combat Outpost twice a day. The JSS is surrounded on all four sides by tall blast walls topped with concertina wire. Read more...


HAMMER

When Captain Scott Eberlein and his unit were patrolling in the Diyala Province of Iraq, they came across a yellow puppy not more than three weeks old.  He was alone, dirty and starving.  The patrol, feeling sorry for the pup, pulled him into their Stryker.  With the help of an Army veterinarian and a lot of “TLC” from the guys in the unit, the puppy began to thrive.  They named the lucky pup Hammer, which is the company’s nickname, and obtained for him designation as a force protection canine. Read more...


MAGGIE

Maggie was found by a couple soldiers who had been waiting for their major to exit a meeting.  The group spotted Maggie and her littermates struggling to survive between a building and some Hesco barriers, with no mother in sight. The only water to which the puppies had access was filthy and given the constant flow of traffic in front of the building, it was just a matter of time before the puppies would be run over and killed. Read more...


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