L/Cpl Brackenbury's family said they were proud of him
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A British soldier from Goole was unlawfully killed by terrorists in Iraq, a coroner has ruled.
L/Cpl Alan Brackenbury, 21, of The King's Royal Hussars (KRH), was killed instantly during a roadside attack in an area south of Al Amarah.
He was manning a gun on top of a Land Rover leading a three-vehicle convoy at the time of the blast in May 2005, an inquest in Oxfordshire heard.
The coroner said: "This was a terrorist attack, nothing short of murder."
Lt Benedict Bishop, also of the KRH, who was in the lead vehicle with L/Cpl Brackenbury, told the inquest the vehicles in the convoy "were not armoured because at the time there was a higher threat level inside Al Amarah, not outside, where we were".
'Jovial atmosphere'
The convoy was heading to meet a commanding officer of the Iraqi border police when the attack happened.
Lt Bishop added: "There was a jovial atmosphere on the vehicle, spirits were good. Then there was an explosion."
Several of L/Cpl Brackenbury's colleagues were injured in the blast.
L/Cpl David Simcock, who was on cover with him, said: "There was nothing I could do for him."
The roadside attack happened 160 miles north of Basra
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The soldier, who joined the Army in 2000, leaves behind his father Stephen, mother Janet, brother David and sister Faye.
Shortly after his death, Mr Brackenbury, said: "Alan loved being in the army - it was all he had ever wanted to do.
"He was immensely proud to be a soldier and we were immensely proud that he was a soldier.
"It is some comfort to us that he died doing what he loved so much."
A verdict of unlawful killing was recorded.
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