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Harry Humiliated as He’s Excluded from Sandhurst’s Top Alumni Book, While James Blunt Is Honored
Prince Harry has suffered another blow as he was left humiliated after being removed from a prestigious book that celebrates the top alumni of Sandhurst.
This exclusion has been deemed a snub by a high-ranking army commander.
Despite his brother, Prince William, making the cut and even writing the foreword to the exclusive guide, the Duke of Sussex failed to secure a spot among the Military Academy's top 200 individuals to have trained at the Armed Forces Military College.
Surprisingly, singer James Blunt made it into the pages of the book They Also Served for his military service in Kosovo before achieving stardom and amassing a fortune.
In contrast, Prince Harry, who now resides in California, finds himself in the company of military outcasts such as fascist leaders Roswald Mosley and Benson Freeman, who joined the Nazi party to become Waffen-SS officers.
Former British army commander Richard Kemp, speaking to The Sun, expressed his understanding for the Prince's exclusion.
He stated, “I completely understand why he's not been included.
I probably would have included him on balance, but it's not a disappointment to not see him in there.
I don't think he did anything particularly notable during his service, but he was certainly a significant person to go to Sandhurst.
I suspect the recent disharmony between him and the royal family has led them to decide against having him in.”
Kemp also highlighted an incident where Harry filmed himself making discriminatory comments towards his Asian and Arab army colleagues at the Sandhurst barracks.
Additionally, the Prince attracted criticism for skipping an army memorial service to attend a Disney premiere, attempting to secure a voice-over gig for his wife.
Prince Harry completed a 44-week training course at Sandhurst in Cumberley, Surrey, in 2005, leaving as an officer cadet the following year.
Author Vaughan Kent Payne, who penned the book They Also Served – 200 People Who Trained at Sandhurst, acknowledges that not everyone who trained at the institution was commendable.
Payne, aged 65, notes that there were individuals who could be described as traitors and cads among the alumni.
This humiliating blow comes almost a year after the release of the Duke's memoir, Spare, in which he boasted about attacking 25 fighters and viewed those he killed as mere chess pieces rather than fellow human beings.
Such bragging is considered insufferable, as true war veterans do not speak of their service in such a callous manner.
This exclusion from the book sends a powerful message, surpassing any previous repercussions Harry has faced.
It is imaginable that this exclusion is immensely humiliating for him, particularly considering how he clings to the narrative of being a military hero.
Without any meaningful direction in life, he relies on this image, despite his drug-addled professional victim persona.
Being shunned by his own military in this manner must be the ultimate insult for a prince.
As we enter the first week of 2024, Harry finds himself linked to an associate of Jeffrey Epstein through his involvement with the Aspen Institute.
Furthermore, he has been left out of the Sandhurst Notables.
Meanwhile, Meghan continues to make grand claims without substantial evidence, while facing the wrath of a prominent attorney who is gathering the numerous lies she has told.
The promised year of reconciliation appears to be off to a rocky start for the couple.