Prince Harry has justified why he revealed he killed 25 Taliban because soldiers should discuss 'parts of our service that haunt us' in a new US magazine piece.
The Duke of Sussex claimed in his memoirs to have killed 25 enemy
fighters during two tours of Afghanistan, calling his victims ‘chess
pieces’ rather than people as a means of bearing the emotional strain of
taking dozens of lives.
Harry told People that he spoke openly about his time in Afghanistan - and killing insurgents - 'for my own healing journey' and 'in the hopes it will help others'.
It came as Harry was accused of reducing the royals to a laughing stock
ahead of an appearance on the satirical 'The Late Show' with Stephen
Colbert, due for broadcast in the US tonight.
Senior figures in the British Army, have said his admission is a breach
of the unwritten code that soldiers do not count ‘notches on their
rifles’. Others said Harry had betrayed ex-comrades by risking their
safety, his own and that of the Royal Family.
Justifying his decision to tell millions that he opened fire and killed
25 fighters as an Apache helicopter gunner, Harry told People, a
favoured US magazine of the Sussexes': 'I know from my own healing
journey that silence has been the least effective remedy. Expressing and
detailing my experience is how I chose to deal with it, in the hopes it
would help others'.
Former military commanders, pilots, aid workers, and diplomats condemned the remarks, which they claimed handed the militants a propaganda victory. He also faced the ignominy of being branded a ‘big-mouth loser’ by the Taliban themselves.
But Harry told People: 'This is something each soldier has to confront,
and in the nearly two decades of working alongside service personnel and
veterans, I've listened to their stories and have shared mine.
'In these conversations, we often talk about the parts of our service that haunt us — the lives lost, the lives taken. But also the parts of our service that heal us and the lives we've saved.
"It's a duty, a job, and a service to our country and having done two
tours of duty in Afghanistan for my country, I've done all I could to be
the best soldier I was trained to be'. He added: 'There's truly no
right or wrong way to try and navigate these feelings'.
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