Prince Harry
Going to
The deployment of Prince Harry's regiment to
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Prince Harry
is said to have bonded well with the men he commands |
He joined the army as a career.
He wants to be taken seriously as a soldier, which is
why he made it clear after he'd finished his officer training at
And so, just as the prime minister announces the start
of Britain's phased withdrawal from Iraq, Second Lieutenant Harry Wales of the
Household Cavalry, is preparing for a tour of duty in that country.
It is the riskiest military deployment by a member of
the royal family since his uncle, Prince Andrew, headed off to the
Harry's departure for
To have the third in line to the British throne on
active service in what, for a British soldier, is an extremely hostile
environment will be an added pressure for
Fulfilling obligations
Yet it shouldn't really be a surprise that Harry is
going.
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In purely practical terms, the British operation in
southern
In personal terms, Harry is keen to go.
He is said to have bonded well with the dozen men he
commands in his troop.
He wants to be there with them; to lead them and to
put into practice what he's been taught in training.
Furthermore - despite the obvious misgivings about
safety - the royal family will want and expect him fully to fulfil
his obligations as a serving soldier.
If he were first or second in the line of succession
the safety considerations would take precedence.
But, unlike his elder brother, Harry has the freedom
to pursue a (relatively) orthodox military career and show what he's capable
of.
Emotional ties
It shouldn't be forgotten that there is no
constituency with which the royal family has closer emotional or instinctive
ties than the armed forces.
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Prince Andrew
served in the |
It is still the case that the majority of male members
of the family have served in one or other of the forces' branches.
From the Duke of Edinburgh's wartime service in the
Royal Navy, via the army careers of the Kent brothers (the Duke, 21 years:
Prince Michael, 20 years), to the naval service of Princes Charles and Andrew
and, now, the army careers of Harry and his elder brother William.
Harry's deployment to
A grandmother's anxiety is much the same in Windsor as
it is in Wallasey or Wick, and in the context of this
particular conflict, it is an anxiety which may perhaps be exacerbated in all
of those places by doubts about the purpose of the whole endeavour.
But Second Lieutenant Harry Wales will be there, doing
his duty with the rest of his regiment, while his father, elder brother and
grandmother will - with several thousand other British families - suddenly have
a very personal stake in the progress of this particular campaign, and an
insight into the stresses that it can provoke.
They
may even find themselves reflecting that not a single senior member of this
government, the ministers of the Crown who committed