Army logistics failings led to the unlawful killing of a Scottish solider, a coroner ruled today.
Gordon Gentle, 19, died when a Land Rover he was patrolling in was hit by a roadside bomb in Basra in Iraq in June 2004.
A coroner's hearing in Oxford had been told how electronic counter-measures (ECMs), designed to disable improvised bombs, were in Iraq at the time but had not been distributed and fitted to vehicles.
Coroner Selena Lynch said: "The supply chain appeared to be chaotic and lacking in clarity."
The Royal Highland Fusilier, from Pollok, died of blast injuries.
The coroner said the inquest at Oxford had seen that the Army's in-theatre supply chain "appeared chaotic and lacking in clarity". Ms Lynch also branded the Ministry of Defence's policies for disclosure of evidence to her inquest "illogical and based errors of law".
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