Steve Bird
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Prince William returned from his short visit to Afghanistan with the body of a soldier killed in action, it emerged yesterday.
Flying Officer Wales accompanied the body of Trooper Robert Pearson during the return flight from Kandahar Air Base after his secret trip to the warzone.
Upon his return, the Prince held a private meeting at RAF Lyneham with the family of Trooper Pearson, who died on April 21 when his vehicle hit a mine.
While the Ministry of Defence insisted that the 30-hour trip with the air crew of a RAF C17 had been planned nearly a month ago, it was criticised by some fellow servicemen and royal-watchers as a public relations exercise.
They claimed it was an attempt to “cover over” the controversial decisions to grant the Prince permission to fly RAF Chinook military helicopters to a stag party on the Isle of Wight and also to his girlfriend's home. It was also suggested that he did not want his military service to be overshadowed by Prince Harry's tour of duty in Afghanistan.
Ken Wharfe, a former royal protection officer, said that Prince William would have been in no real danger during his visit.
He said: “There is an element of risk but there would be no way security officials would allow it to happen. It would be pretty well sterile while he was there.
“I'm slightly sceptical about this. I think the cynics amongst us will say it's an attempt to cover up the Chinook jollies.”
The Stop The War coalition described the visit as a “shameful waste of public money” and accused the Ministry of Defence of using troops in Afghanistan to try to “cleanse” the Prince's image.
The decision to repatriate the body of the 22-year-old member of the Queen's Royal Lancers was unrelated to the presence of the Prince being on the flight, it is understood.
While the details of Prince William's meeting with the family were not released, the soldier's relatives from Grimsby, Lincolnshire, issued a statement.
It read: “We can confirm that we had a short private meeting with Prince William at RAF Lyneham and we now request that the media respect our need for privacy as we come to terms with our loss.”
The trooper was killed when a mine went off as he was protecting a resupply convoy returning to Camp Bastion, Britain's main base in Helmand province.
Trooper Pearson was the 94th British serviceman to die in Afghanistan since the launch of the US-led war against the Taleban in 2001.
The Prince of Wales and the Queen gave their consent to the Prince's trip, Clarence House said.
During the exercise William flew a C17 Globemaster military transport plane that left RAF Brize Norton on Sunday, arriving in Afghanistan the next day.
The official purpose of the trip was for the Prince to familiarise himself with RAF operations in a battle situation. An MoD source said the suggestion that the trip was a public relations exercise was “absolute nonsense”, adding that the possibility of the Prince joining a flight into an operational theatre had been under consideration last year.
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Are we supposed to believe that a special aircraft was commissioned for Prince William. Whatever the chap does its going to get up somebody's nose. He should have been sent to Dartmouth, passed out as an officer and put on a ship out of harms way where the press can't go. He's better off in the navy
Phil de Buquet, Newport,
I, for one, have great admiration and respect for the Royal Family, and would trade them for the lot we have any day. I think it was a wonderful gesture for HRH Prince William to go to that God forsaken place, and to meet PRIVATELY with Trooper Pearson's family. His critics need a good smack!
John McIlray, Scottsdale, Arizona, USA
Whatever Prince William does attracts some criticism. By all means criticise if he acts in a way which is likely to affect his future role in life or the way in which it is likely to be perceived but at the moment we seem to have sniping for the sake of sniping. Please lay off him.
Colin Ashley, Cumbria,
Oh please! Stop the War Coalition? Who?
Have some common pride in your country and Queen. Prince William is settinfg a fine example to the young people of Britain by doing his duty. it is as simple as that.
What ... did the rest of the whiners and spoilers do today?
JulianB, London, UK
Since the C-17 was going anyway, and given that the presence of one extra person aboard will have added exactly zero cost to the flight, how on earth do the Stop the War Coalition work out that it was a waste of public money?
AJ West, Shrivenham, UK
Can Mr Wharfe explain how the security people persuaded the Taleban not to subject the airfield to an indirect fire attack? Has he any idea of how difficult (impossible) it is to make the environment at the airbase 'sterile? If he knows how, the RAF Regiment would love to hear from him...
AJ West, Shrivenham, UK