NOWY DWOR MAZOWIECKI, Poland — The new privates received their ranks amid military pomp in a town near Warsaw where a Napoleonic fortress attests to a long military history. The group was made up of a German shepherd, a Dutch shepherd and two Belgian Malinois.
The dogs — Einar, Eliot, Enzo and Emi — were bestowed with their ranks Friday as part of a new Polish program aimed at honoring the service of dogs used to detect explosives, a job valued for its role in protecting human life.
Gen. Wiesław Kukuła, Chief of the General Staff of the Polish Army, decided last year that dogs serving in the Polish army would qualify for six military ranks ranging from private through corporal to sergeant.
The change has been welcomed by their loyal human handlers.
''The rank is meant to honor the hard work of the dog in service,'' said Lance Corporal Daniel Kęsicki, who recently completed a five-month training course with Eliot, a 2-year-old Belgian Malinois. ''To me it's a symbolic recognition that the dog is serving the homeland.''
The dogs honored Friday belong to the 2nd Mazovian Engineer Regiment, which in 2007 became the first unit of Poland's armed forces to introduce dogs into service, according to spokesman Capt. Dominik Płaza. He said none have died in action.
During the ceremony the dogs' handlers were one by one handed a badge with their animals' rank which they attached to their dogs' harnesses. The ceremonies take place during other military events, and this one occurred during the commemoration of the regiment's 80th anniversary. The dogs were given their ranks for having completed basic training and having served for more than a year.
The ranks are a largely symbolic recognition ''so that we, too, are aware that such a dog is a member of the armed forces,'' Płaza said.