'I'm a royal expert and this is why Prince Harry was left out of key military book'


In a post on X, Levin claimed, “Harry left out of Sandhurst’s new significant book. The military takes an oath of allegiance to the Monarchy, but Harry keeps attacking them.

“Plus in his memoir Spare, he wrote the Army taught him to see the enemy as less than human, which goes against military behaviour.”

In his memoir Spare, released almost a year ago to this day in January 2023, Harry claimed he killed 25 people while on his second tour of Afghanistan during his time as an Apache helicopter pilot.

He also sparked a backlash from the military community by referring to Taliban members as “chess pieces”.

The Duke of Sussex wrote in the book: “So my number: twenty-five. When I found myself plunged in the heat and confusion of combat I didn’t think of those 25 as people.

“They were chess pieces removed from the board. Bad people were eliminated before they could kill good people.”

There is one mention of Harry in the new Army book – in an entry discussing his older brother William, which reads: “His status as a future king meant that he could not be deployed on operations like his younger brother, Harry.”

Wartime Prime Minister Winston Churchill, astronaut Tim Peake, and rugby star Josh Lewsey all made the cut.

A Sandhurst Spokesperson said: “The book highlights the breadth of accomplishments and experiences across Sandhurst graduates rather than just focusing on the most well-known.”



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