The picture of Chris Thompson was taken in May 2006. This image is part of a long-term series of images I have been working on for the last three years on British Ex-Servicemen.
Chris, aged 20, was a private soldier with the 1st Light Infantry Regiment. His right leg was shattered on March 11th 2004 by an improvised explosive device (IED) packed with steel ball bearings. The IED was buried in a road by insurgents and detonated as his vehicle slowed at a police checkpoint in Al Amara, southeast Iraq.
Chris remembers the bang, the screaming and the blood he saw in the rear of the vehicle in which he was standing. He also recalls a British Quick Reaction Force (QRF) arriving and the Sergeant Major asking him if he could walk, to which the teenager replied “Na”.
He was operated on in Shaibah, the main British Army Logistical base in Iraq, then flown back to Selly Oak hospital outside Birmingham where a doctor told him amputation was his only choice.
This series of pictures on Iraq war veterans is due to be published in the autumn for British GQ magazine.

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