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Disabled soldier goes back to war in Afghanistan (British Paratrooper lost leg)
The Times (U.K.) ^ | April 8, 2008 | Sonia Verma

Posted on 04/08/2008 12:44:25 PM PDT by Stoat

Disabled soldier goes back to war in Afghanistan

Six months after losing a leg, Corporal Stuart Hale has returned to the battle zone in Afghanistan

A British paratrooper who lost his leg to a landmine has become the first amputee to return to military service in Afghanistan, in the war zone where he was disabled.

Corporal Stuart Hale arrived with the 3rd Batallion, The Parachute Regiment last month for a joint operation against the Taleban with Canadian forces in Kandahar province.

It is a fight that he was forced to leave on a stretcher nearly two years ago when he and four comrades were cut down in a minefield and left waiting for five hours in a botched helicopter rescue.

In an exclusive interview with The Times at Kandahar airbase, the 26-year-old soldier spoke about losing his leg, his anger over mistakes made during the rescue and his arduous journey back to the front.

Sitting in the shade outside his regiment’s headquarters where he now works as an intelligence officer, Corporal Hale wore a camouflage-coloured prosthesis on what remains of his right leg. His left leg is intact but swollen red from an infection that put him in hospital over the weekend. The little finger on his right hand is gone.

“Other people try to find different ways, but I just want to get back to the way I was. That’s why I’m out here,” he said.

It was September 6, 2006, and Corporal Hale was nearing the end of a six-month tour in Helmand province. What was meant to be a peacekeeping mission had become a relentless battle with the Taleban.

From the remote hilltop outpost where he was stationed, Corporal Hale, a sniper, spotted an enemy checkpoint just out of his rifle range. “We saw these two Taleban, but we also saw kids running around. I didn’t want that on my conscience so I decided to take two guys closer to the checkpoint and take the Taleban out with my sniper rifle,” he recalled.

He led his patrol down the mountain and hopped across a riverbed. Buried beneath the dirt was a Soviet-made landmine.

“It felt like I’d slipped and I dropped my rifle. When I went to pick it up that’s when I saw my finger was hanging off and I realised something bad had happened. Then I looked down and it dawned on me.”

His right foot had been blown off just above the top of his boot. The mine had sliced through his thigh bone and left the rest of the leg dangling in a bloody mess. As comrades rushed to his rescue they triggered a chain of secondary explosions, resulting in four soldiers injured and one dead.

“It sounded like every other minute there was another explosion and another guy went down. And all I remember thinking was, ‘All this just because of me’.”

A Chinook helicopter was called in to get them out but could not land without risking setting off more explosions. It was not equipped with a winch, and so could not lift the soldiers to safety. “That was a big mistake, but it all comes down to, I guess, funding and money and people trying to cut corners,” Corporal Hale said. “It’s just a shame that it takes lives to get people to pay attention to this.” Eventually the soldiers were lifted out by US Blackhawk helicopters.

The soldiers were subsequently recognised for their bravery. Corporal Mark Wright, who died trying to save the wounded, was posthumously awarded the George Cross.

Some of the wounded soldiers were rehabilitated and took up civilian jobs, but Corporal Hale — who has two young children and is engaged to be married — knew immediately that he wanted to return. Six months after losing his leg he returned to active duty. When the call came to return to Afghanistan, he didn’t hesitate. Half of his battle group returned with him.

The prosthetic leg presents problems, but he has not ruled out a return to the front line. “If I could be deployed in the same capacity I’d be back out there on those hilltops.”

At Kandahar airbase, the hub of the fight in the south of the country, he gets a mixed reaction. “Some guys have spoken to me and said I’m a real credit to my country. Others look at me with suspicion because they think, ‘That could happen to me’,” he said.

“But I wanted to come back out here and for people to think, ‘If the worst should happen to me, at least I know I can be back out here and still have a life in the military’.”

Fighting spirits

— Nelson put a telescope to his blind eye at the Battle of Copenhagen, then said he could not see a signal to withdraw by the commander of the British fleet. He then destroyed many Danish and Norwegian ships. Nelson lost his arm at the Battle of Santa Cruz de Tenerife, and died at the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805, shot by a sniper after pacing the deck in full regalia

— Injured first in the Boer War then in Somaliland, where he lost an eye, Lieutenant-General Sir Adrian Carton de Wiart, VC, received eight wounds in the First World War, including the loss of his left hand. He is thought to have been the inspiration for Brigadier Ben Ritchie Hook in Evelyn Waugh's Sword of Honour trilogy

— Douglas Bader rejoined the RAF at the outbreak of the Second World War, despite having lost both legs in a flying accident in 1931. He became a fighter ace, was shot down in 1941 and incarcerated for the rest of the war

— Mark Ormrod, of 40 Commando, lost both legs and his right arm after stepping on a landmine in Helmand province on Christmas Eve 2007. His first words to the doctor were: “No s**t, I think my dancing days are over.”

Sources: Times database, Who’s Who in Twentieth Century Warfare, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, the Douglas Bader Foundation



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: afghanistan; amputee; britain; england; greatbritain; paratrooper; uk; unitedkingdom; waronterror; wot
Also:

Amputee Brit back in action The Sun HomePageNewsCampaignsOur Boys

 

Corporal Stuart Hale, from Bristol, sitting on a quad bike with his rifle at Camp Bastion in southern Afghanistan. Cpl Hale who lost a leg in one of the most notorious incidents of the war in Afghanistan has become the first British serviceman to return to active service there as an amputee.

Corporal Stuart Hale ... returns to active service

 

 

Amputee Brit back in action

 

By VINCE SOODIN

Published: Today

 
 

A FEARLESS paratrooper who lost a leg in Afghanistan has become the first British soldier to return to action there as an amputee.

Corporal Stuart Hale is back in southern Afghanistan less than two years after he suffered horrific injuries in a mine blast in Helmand Province.

The 26-year-old from the 3rd Battalion, the Parachute Regiment, was one of several soldiers injured after being caught in an unmarked minefield near the Kajaki Dam on September 6, 2006.

His colleague Corporal Mark Wright, who was killed in the incident, posthumously received the George Cross for his actions that day.

An army investigation later highlighted that the injured troops had been forced to wait for several hours for rescue after a Chinook helicopter was unable to land and had no winch to lift the men to safety.

Cpl Hale had his right leg amputated because of the injuries he suffered and had to learn how to walk again at the specialist military rehabilitation centre Headley Court in Surrey.

Speaking in November 2006 he described the learning experience as like being a one-year-old again and expressed hopes that he could return to theatre.

 

Credit to country

 

He has now returned to active service, working in intelligence at Kandahar Airfield, the main Nato hub in southern Afghanistan.

He explained: “Other people try to find different ways, but I just want to get back to the way I was. That’s why I’m out here.”

Describing the reaction he has received since his arrival in theatre, he said: “Some guys have spoken to me and said I’m a real credit to my country.

“Others look at me with suspicion because they think ’that could happen to me’.

“But I wanted to come back out here and for people to think, ’If the worst should happen to me, at least I know I can be back out here and still have a life in the military’.”

He admitted his prosthetic leg - camouflaged of course - did have some limitations but added: “If I could be deployed in the same capacity I’d be back out there on those hilltops.”

One of Cpl Hale’s battalion comrades, Sergeant Stuart Pearson, who also lost a leg in the same incident, has also returned to duty and hopes to go back to Afghanistan one day.


1 posted on 04/08/2008 12:44:31 PM PDT by Stoat
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To: Stoat

I hope he gets to settle the score


2 posted on 04/08/2008 1:12:34 PM PDT by SMARTY ('At some point you get tired of swatting flies, and you have to go for the manure heap' Gen. LeMay)
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To: Stoat

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C2LrLtKiSq4&feature=related


3 posted on 04/08/2008 1:26:36 PM PDT by LSUfan
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To: Stoat

Guys like that give me a warm and fuzzy feeling inside. That is, knowing there still are men like this willing to do ugly and bad things to keep us free and safe. A genuine “bad ass.”


4 posted on 04/08/2008 1:32:19 PM PDT by Red6 (Come and take it.)
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