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Britain
IÂ’m no hero, says Prince Harry
2008-03-02
LONDON - Prince Harry, pulled out of a 10-week tour ofduty in Afghanistan for security reasons, wants a swift return to the frontline, he said an interview published Sunday, insisting he is not a hero.
You're a soldier. That's good enough for all of us.
But as the 23-year-old spent his first night on British soil since mid-December, the head of the British Army dealt his ambitions an immediate blow, saying he was unlikely to return to the fray in the near future.

The young prince said he was “slightly disappointed” about having to come home early, after a US website broke an embargo agreed between British media and the defence ministry not to publish his whereabouts for security reasons. And he said he was now waiting to hear from his superiors about his future role but was still keen to rejoin his regimental colleagues. “As far as I see it, yeah, I would love to go back and I’ve already mentioned it (to my commanding officer) that I want to go out very, very soon,” he added.

But the Chief of the General Staff, General Sir Richard Dannatt, said while Harry’s ambitions and enthusiasm were understandable, he could not see that happening for at least 18 months. “He’s just had a deployment, we wouldn’t expect to send any young officer in the normal course of events who has just had — albeit 10 weeks and that quite quickly — for another tour,” he said. “So, actually the immediate prospect of Prince Harry going anywhere else is some way off in the future. It actually is hypothetical for the next 12 or 18 months whether he would or wouldn’t deploy again.”

In interviews soon after his return, Harry spoke matter-of-factly about his work calling in air strikes, patrolling and firing at insurgents in Helmand province, in southern Afghanistan. “You do what you have to do, what’s necessary to save your own guys. If you need to drop a bomb, worst case scenario then you will, but then that’s just the way it is,” he said. “It’s not nice to drop bombs... but to save lives that’s what happens.”

But he rejected the tag of “hero”, amid fulsome praise for his work from British political and military leaders and the media. “I wouldn’t say I’m a hero at all. I’m no more a hero than anyone else. If you think about it there’s thousands and thousands of troops out there,” he said.

Two unconscious, badly injured soldiers — one of whom lost an arm and a leg to a landmine — were on his plane home, he told reporters. “Those are the heroes,” he said.

He also said that during his time at an operating base just 500 metres (1,600 feet) from Taliban positions, he felt secure because there was “no place safer” to be than in the presence of Gurkhas. “Everyone is really well looked after here by the Gurkhas, the food is fantastic — goat curries, chicken curries ... it’s really good fun,” he added.
Posted by:Steve White

#3  Think about his parents and how hard it is for fruit to fall far from the tree.

Maybe the recessives doubled up...

Either way, the young lad is a credit to the uniform and has earned his spurs.
Posted by: DarthVader   2008-03-02 13:49  

#2  Think about his parents and how hard it is for fruit to fall far from the tree.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2008-03-02 13:44  

#1  How can you not like this guy?
Posted by: Ol Dirty American   2008-03-02 12:32  

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