In June 1954, he began National Service, spending the first few months in Germany as an Army photographer.
An Army photographer took some photographs for the action file, and as the flash went off she thought, God, I would be swearing a hair cap.
An Army photographer then moves in to take a picture of the new room layout.
After enlisting in the Navy while under age, he subsequently became an Army photographer in South Vietnam.
These included both newspaper and Army photographers.
Army photographers also shot real-life footage in Papua for use in the movie.
He became an Army photographer, with much of his work printed in the forces' magazine Belvoir Castle.
Khaldei's most renowned photographs were taken when he was a Red Army photographer from 1941 to 1946.
Ronald Haeberle, an Army photographer, was there that day with two cameras.