Prince's Afghan role a carrot after Iraq refusal

BRITAIN: THE JOB that Prince Harry was doing in Afghanistan was essentially a "carrot" to stop him leaving the British army …

BRITAIN:THE JOB that Prince Harry was doing in Afghanistan was essentially a "carrot" to stop him leaving the British army after he was refused permission to fight in Iraq with the soldiers he had led throughout his army career.

After his men left for Basra without him, he retrained for a job he had never done.

He was then deployed to Afghanistan without his regiment or the soldiers he commanded as a cornet in the Household Cavalry, equivalent to the rank of second lieutenant.

Instead of being the troop leader of a group of four Scimitar tanks which work as the "eyes and the ears" of the army and operate on the frontline, he was given a new job principally controlling aircraft from the relative safety of a heavily fortified camp.

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The job as forward air controller meant Harry had to retrain completely. "[ It] is a somewhat different role I never thought I would see myself doing in the army," he admitted.

The Ministry of Defence denied that the role had been created for the prince in a compromise between Clarence House (the royal family) and the army.

It said that he had been selected for it because the officer previously carrying out the role needed a break after serving in both Iraq and Afghanistan.

Harry worked in Afghanistan alongside another member of his regiment, who was also on an individual attachment.

The prince has never made secret his determination to serve on the frontline, whatever the risk.

Last February it was announced that Harry would deploy to Iraq, but in May Gen Sir Richard Dannatt, the British army's chief of the general staff, said he would no longer be going after intelligence was received of a number of specific threats from insurgents to Prince Harry and those serving alongside him.

The decision was based on reports that he would be a specific target, a "bullet magnet", as Harry described it.

In an interview prior to his departure last December, Harry said he considered resigning his commission until the air controller job was dangled in front of him.

Among those kept informed from the beginning was the Queen. "She was very 'pro' me going then so I think she's relieved that I get the chance to do what I want to do. She's a very good person to talk to about it, her knowledge of the army is amazing for a grandmother - I suppose it's slightly her job