Prince Harry due to arrive back in Britain


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Shifty
03-01-2008, 04:50 AM
http://static-p-a.comcast.net/api/assets/bin/2008/03/62/627119017a42c4ae670b2e716a92c9ae.jpg Britain's Prince Harry cleans the dust from a machine gun on his Spartan armoured vehicle ...

http://www6.comcast.net/news/articles/general/2008/02/29/NEWS-BRITAIN-AFGHAN-HARRY-DC/print/

By Luke Baker, Reuters
Sat Mar 1, 2:42 AM EST

Prince Harry was due to arrive back in Britain on Saturday after news leaked that he had been secretly fighting on the frontline in Afghanistan for 10 weeks, defense sources said.
The Queen's 23-year-old grandson, who is third in line to the throne, will be met by his brother William and father Prince Charles at RAF Brize Norton, in Oxfordshire.
He flew out of Afghanistan prematurely amid fears for his security and those soldiers fighting alongside him.
He was sent to Afghanistan in December. But for security reasons and in agreement with the Ministry of Defense, the British media did not report the deployment.
That agreement collapsed after Web sites in Australia, Germany and the United States leaked the news on Thursday.
The ministry said the decision to withdraw him was "taken primarily on the basis that the worldwide media coverage of Prince Harry in Afghanistan could impact on the security of those who are deployed there, as well as the risks to him as an individual soldier."
Harry, the son of Prince Charles and the late Princess Diana, has been active during his 10 weeks of combat, calling in air strikes against Taliban positions, carrying out foot patrols and firing a heavy-duty machine gun at suspected fighters.
It is the first time a British royal has been deployed in combat since the Falklands war 25 years ago, when Harry's uncle Prince Andrew flew helicopters.
After knowledge of his presence became known, there were heightened concerns he could become a target of the Taliban, al Qaeda or other Islamist militants operating in the country, endangering the prince as well as fellow soldiers.
Afghan Foreign Minister Rangeen Dadfar Spanta hailed Harry's involvement, calling it "a sign of solidarity for Afghans in their anti-terror fight... it shows that the Prince is ready to combat this serious challenge."
MEDIA DEAL
When it was announced last year that he could be deployed to Iraq, militant groups threatened to kidnap or kill him. The deployment was later cancelled due to the threats. When it came to Afghanistan, the military tried a different approach.
The fact the embargo on the deployment held for 2-1/2 months was a surprise, particularly given the cut throat, free-for-all nature of the British tabloid press. But it has also led to a debate about the media and "backroom deals."
Jon Snow, the Channel 4 News presenter, said the embargo affair could be damaging for the media's credibility.
"One wonders whether viewers, readers and listeners will ever want to trust media bosses again," he wrote on his blog.
Reuters, like other news outlets, agreed to the embargo, seeing it as similar to those often arranged with banks and governments to release sensitive information at a specific time.
The only national newspaper that did not put the Harry story on its front page on Friday was the Independent.
"The most interesting aspect about all this is the breaking of the media embargo by Drudge, but we decided that in itself wasn't big enough to warrant the front page," deputy editor-in-chief Ian Birrell told Reuters.
As far as the embargo goes, though, Birrell was supportive.
"I don't see a problem at all. I think the media has acted in a very responsible manner on what has been a difficult situation in which lives were at risk," he said.

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Antlurz
03-01-2008, 04:56 AM
I think some of it is likely way over hyped. I saw footage of him both on a HMG and firing a pistol. In both cases, it was obvious he was very tentative about shooting either one, it appeared. Certainly, he wasn't very "comfortable" with either one.

And in both instances, wasn't aiming, but merely tossing lead downrange.

Shifty
03-01-2008, 05:13 AM
:dunno: He certainly sounded dedicated in the news interview. Too bad a few idiots had to ruin it for him.

Olys45
03-01-2008, 05:51 AM
He sounded like any other grunt in the interview I saw yesterday on Fox News. I also like the fact that the ball cap he had on had a subdued American Flag!

Oly

Dave D.
03-01-2008, 06:59 AM
Another triumph for journalism. :down:

DesertDawg
03-01-2008, 08:13 AM
I enjoyed the interview of Prince Harry, for he wasn't snobbish, and sounded like a "typical" soldier. He even sounded like he was glad that he had those few months in Afghanistan....AWAY from the constant hounding of the news media.

will46
03-01-2008, 12:48 PM
Looks to me like he did ok. It would have been easy for him to avoid the whole deal.

klugj1
03-01-2008, 03:13 PM
At first, part of me thought this was a risky publicity stunt. After the dust settled...Kudos to him for doing it. I'm sure he had quite the fight at home before he left.

Jon

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