War dog that assisted in assault on bin Laden might have been trained at AuburnWritten by Staff Arts / Culture, The Daily Believer: Random Notes, Posts, and Webphemera May 5, 2011 Who let the dogs out on Osama? It might have been AuburnLet’s just go ahead and say that Auburn University killed Osama bin Laden.Because not only did we recently learn that terrorism’s nightmare and Auburn alum Richard “Shark Man of the Delta†Marcinko founded the elite Navy SEAL team that took out the Al Qaeda leader, it now seems entirely possible that a dog possibly trained, at least in part, at Auburn University’s Canine Detection Training Center helped them do it.“Funny that you called, we were just talking about that,†said John Pearce, Associate Director of Auburn University’s Canine Detection Research Institute, speaking of Wednesday’s New York Times story that claims a bomb-sniffing dog accompanied the 80 American commandos that stormed bin Laden’s compound.The revelation has resulted in a flurry of blog posts on so-called “war dogs,†including a photo essay posted today on ForeignPolicy.com that dedicates an entire page to the “vapor-wake dogs†trained at Auburn:Scientists at Auburn University’s College of Veterinary Medicine have genetically bred and specially trained canines to not only detect stationary bombs or bomb-making materials, but identify and alert their handler to the moving scent of explosive devices and materials left behind in the air, say, as a suicide bomber walked through a crowd — all without ever tipping off the perpetrator. While not as expensive as some military-trained dogs, the cost of breeding and training these dogs cost is not cheap at around $20,000 each.According to the Washington Post, the dog used in the bin Laden operation was trained for combat environments at Lackland Air Force Base in Texas, but the New York Times story claims that the primary function of dogs used by Navy SEALS is finding explosives. Is it possible the dog received that part of it’s training in Auburn?“We haven’t heard that [it was an Auburn-trained dog],†Pearce said. “No one has called to tell us that or anything.â€Pearce says Auburn University’s Canine Detection Training Center currently has contracts with Federal Protective Services, private security companies, and “several other agencies,†some of which he was not at liberty to reveal.“I’d say it was unlikely it was one of our dogs, but we really don’t keep up with the dogs after they leave the program.â€Pearce says that there are many training programs similar to Auburn’s, which was recently featured on Fox News, across the country.But Auburn’s is the best, right?“Oh yeah, ours is the best.â€