Marine reunites with military dog

? He saw a squirrel the other day in his new back yard in Derby and chased it up a tree.

First time he’d ever done that. He hadn’t seen squirrels, or trees, in Afghanistan.

It was a big moment for ETTy, a black and white mutt adopted in Afghanistan in December by 1st Lt. Chris Corman of Derby and some of his Marine buddies.

Corman, 28, was stationed with about 20 other Marines in Mehtar Lam, halfway between Kabul and Jalalabad.

For nine months, they served as an embedded training team with a unit of the Afghan National Army.

So they named the mutt ETTy, for Embedded Training Team puppy. They raised him on chow-hall food and care packages from home.

When their families learned they had a dog, Corman said, “All of our care packages quickly turned from being magazines and anything we wanted to being dog food.”

When plans fell through for another Marine to take him, Corman stepped up. Back in Derby, Corman’s parents, Dan and Peggy Corman, raised $4,000 to have ETTy flown to stay with them.

Dan’s co-workers at Citizens Bank of Kansas pitched in, and Peggy, who retired as a teacher at Wineteer Elementary School, tapped her teaching friends.

A volunteer animal rescue group in Afghanistan called Tigger House arranged the trip. It didn’t go smoothly. ETTy became ill with respiratory problems in Kabul, delaying his departure for a month. An American vet gave him a 50-50 chance to live.

But antibiotics worked, and ETTy flew to Islamabad, Pakistan, where he was bumped from connecting flights to New York for animals that were flying with passengers.

He eventually reached New York, then flew to Kansas City, Mo. Dan and Peggy picked him up there.

Chris Corman flew into Wichita from Okinawa late Friday. He will report for a new assignment in Virginia on Thursday. He plans to take ETTy along once he finds housing.