The Taliban have expressed their fury after Prince Harry revealed he killed 25 enemy ‘chess pieces’ during his deployment in Afghanistan, in his tell-all memoir Spare.

Speaking to MailOnline, the infamously brutal militants taunted the Prince, saying they had the last laugh over the West and the ‘big mouth loser’ Duke of Sussex by recapturing the country in 2021.

The Taliban said while their Mujaheddin ‘chess pieces’ are the ultimate victors of the conflict, Harry had ‘fled to his grandmother’s palace’ and is now struggling to maintain a place in the Royal Family, in response to the claims made in the soon-to-be-released book – which leaked in Spain days before its official release date.

In Spare, Harry also goes in depth into the operational specifics of fighting the Taliban, and details one instance in which he disagreed with American pilots over what type of bomb to use in order to bust an enemy bunker.

The Duke says he wanted to use the larger bomb available to carry out his first air strike, which resulted in the deaths of Taliban fighters.

Members of the Taliban have expressed their fury over Prince Harry's claims that he killed 25 'chess pieces' during his second deployment in Afghanistan. The Duke of Sussex undertook two tours of Afghanistan. In his memoir, he says he did not think of those killed 'as people' but instead 'chess pieces' he had taken off the board prompting anger from the Taliban

Members of the Taliban have expressed their fury over Prince Harry’s claims that he killed 25 ‘chess pieces’ during his second deployment in Afghanistan. The Duke of Sussex undertook two tours of Afghanistan. In his memoir, he says he did not think of those killed ‘as people’ but instead ‘chess pieces’ he had taken off the board prompting anger from the Taliban

Taliban fighters said while the 'chess pieces' are the victors and now ruling the country, the 'big mouth loser' Prince is struggling to maintain a place in his family, in response to the claims made by Harry in his soon-to-be-released memoir Spare. Pictured: Taliban fighters in Kabul celebrate the one year anniversary since they re-took the country, August 15, 2022

Taliban fighters said while the ‘chess pieces’ are the victors and now ruling the country, the ‘big mouth loser’ Prince is struggling to maintain a place in his family, in response to the claims made by Harry in his soon-to-be-released memoir Spare. Pictured: Taliban fighters in Kabul celebrate the one year anniversary since they re-took the country, August 15, 2022

Speaking from a checkpoint outside Islam Qala, a town on the border with Iran, Taliban commander Molavi Agha Gol, 32, said that he thought Harry was attention seeking. ‘We are still here ruling but he has fled to his grandmother’s palace. He’s a big mouth loser who has been trying to get attention,’ Agha Gol said.

‘I do not even believe what he said about the Mujaheddin. He is a loser and scared to go to a combat zone. We made history by kicking him and his army out of our homeland and he should be very angry about that,’ he said.

‘Do not believe whatever losers tell you. I see news about him a lot on my Facebook feed and really think he’s gone mad and needs a doctor immediately,’ he added.

‘Even if he believes [that he killed 25 Taliban], our martyred Mujaheddin are in heaven, but his invading friends are burning in hell and I really hope I was in Helmand when he was there, to make him understand what real chess pieces are.’

‘If he’s a real man and not a f***ing loser, come to Afghanistan again,’ Agha Gol challenged the Duke of Sussex.

Prince Harry claimed in his memoir that he killed 25 Taliban fighters during his second tour of duty in Afghanistan. The memoir is the latest in a string of public revelations and accusations by Harry and Meghan that have shaken the royal family.

Harry, who was known as ‘Captain Wales’ in the military, wrote that he did not think of those killed ‘as people’ but instead ‘chess pieces’ he had taken off the board.

‘You can’t kill people if you see them as people’, he wrote, and said he instead saw them as ‘chess pieces removed from the board’… as ‘bad guys eliminated’.

Harry pictured during his second tour of duty at Camp Bastion, southern Afghanistan, in 2013

Harry detailed the shock revelation in his tell-all memoir Spare that has been leaked in Spain days before it was due to be published

Prince Harry claimed in his memoir Spare (pictured right) that he killed 25 Taliban fighters during his second tour of duty in Afghanistan (left). The memoir is the latest in a string of public revelations and accusations by Harry and Meghan that have shaken the royal family

‘Pieces of chess are now in power and he’s struggling to maintain his place within his own family,’ an official in the Taliban’s Ministry for the Propagation of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice, said in response.

Abul Qahar Balkhi, spokesman for the Taliban ministry of foreign affairs, said in a statement: ‘The western occupation of Afghanistan is truly an odious moment in human history and comments by Prince Harry are a microcosm of the trauma experienced by Afghans at the hands of occupation forces who murdered innocents without any accountability.

‘Some of the recent reports highlighting the scale of murder by foreign airpower and raids including by UK forces is what Prince Harry also participated in,’ he added.

Harry spent a decade in the British Army before taking up full-time royal duties in 2015. During that time, he did two tours of Afghanistan. 

The prince was first deployed to Helmand province as a forward air controller in 2007, but his first tour of duty was cut short. 

He returned in 2012, by which time he was responsible for firing a £45 million Apache helicopter’s 30mm cannon and Hellfire missiles.

Spare is the first time that Harry, 38, has specified the number of insurgents he personally killed during his time in Afghanistan. The Prince said that he flew on six missions that resulted in the ‘taking of human lives’ in his autobiography.

While many soldiers do not know how many enemies they have killed in combat, the Duke wrote that ‘in the era of Apaches and laptops’ he was able to say ‘with exactness’ the number of insurgents he killed.

Abul Qahar Balkhi (pictured, file photo), spokesman for the Taliban ministry of foreign affairs, was one of the Taliban to respond to Prince Harry's claims. 'The western occupation of Afghanistan is truly an odious moment in human history and comments by Prince Harry are a microcosm of the trauma experienced by Afghans at the hands of occupation forces,' he said

Abul Qahar Balkhi (pictured, file photo), spokesman for the Taliban ministry of foreign affairs, was one of the Taliban to respond to Prince Harry’s claims. ‘The western occupation of Afghanistan is truly an odious moment in human history and comments by Prince Harry are a microcosm of the trauma experienced by Afghans at the hands of occupation forces,’ he said

‘It’s him claiming that he martyred the Taliban, but it may be civilians too. If England has a system and regulations, they should investigate and see whom he killed,’ Molavi Keramudin, a Taliban commander in the central city of Ghor.

‘He is a so-called prince and should not freely walk after killing civilians. It is not acceptable. He has problems and is just climbing over whatever he can to stop himself and his country’s falling into sh*t,’ he said.

After learning how to fly Apache helicopters, Harry was deployed to Camp Bastion in southern Afghanistan in 2012 where he stayed for 20 weeks. While there, Harry helped provide helicopter support to the International Security Assistance Force and Afghan forces operating throughout Helmand province.

Based out of Camp Bastion, 662 Squadron Army Air Corps, to which he belonged, flew more than a hundred deliberate missions over 2,500 flying hours. 

‘I remember when Mujaheddin attacked Shorabak [Camp Bastion], when I got to know he was there, I regretted a lot why I was not there,’ Jamal Mujahid, a member of the Taliban army’s Badri Unit – a suicide squad in the southern province of Kandahar.

‘I wish I was in that operation. I challenge him to come back to Afghanistan. If he’s proud of killing 25 of us, we killed thousands of them and kicked them out,’ he added.

In the summer of 2021, the Taliban took control of Afghanistan with a lighting offensive that swept across the country in a matter of weeks, overthrowing the Western-backed government that was installed by the US, UK and their allies.

Leaders of the Western backed government fled the country as Western coalition forces pulled out of the country, culminating in the collape of the Afghan military and the Taliban capturing Kabul on August 15, 2021. 

Despite promising a more progressive regime than when they were last in power in 2001, the Taliban have eroded the rights of women and minority groups in the country, most recently banning women from attending university – a move that drew fierce condemnation from the international community.  

In the summer of 2021, the Taliban took control of Afghanistan with a lighting offensive that swept across the country in a matter of weeks, overthrowing the Western-backed government. Pictured: Taliban fighters celebrate one year since they seized the Afghan capital, Kabul, in front of the U.S. Embassy in the city, in Afghanistan on Monday, August 15, 2022

In the summer of 2021, the Taliban took control of Afghanistan with a lighting offensive that swept across the country in a matter of weeks, overthrowing the Western-backed government. Pictured: Taliban fighters celebrate one year since they seized the Afghan capital, Kabul, in front of the U.S. Embassy in the city, in Afghanistan on Monday, August 15, 2022

Molavi Nabi Jan, a Taliban official in the western Afghan city of Herat, said: ‘He’s a dirty idiot and a drunk jackal. He has destroyed all bridges behind him and is now just trying to avoid drowning in history. 

‘Using the Taliban and his family is his last tool to make people talk about him. I know him very well. God left him on his own to give him a very big punishment at the end.’

‘He’s evil. God damn him, his family and his palaces. He’s made lots of Afghan women widows and lots of children orphans and he’s proud of that,’ an official in the provincial governor of the southern Helmand province told MailOnline.

Another Taliban official, Anas Haqqani, tweeted: ‘Mr. Harry! The ones you killed were not chess pieces, they were humans; they had families who were waiting for their return. Among the killers of Afghans, not many have your decency to reveal their conscience and confess to their war crimes.

‘The truth is what you’ve said; Our innocent people were chess pieces to your soldiers, military and political leaders. Still, you were defeated in that “game” of white & black “square”. 

‘I don’t expect that the ICC will summon you or the human rights activists will condemn you, because they are deaf and blind for you. But hopefully these atrocities will be remembered in the history of humanity,’ he added.

In addition to revealing that he killed 25 Taliban during his second tour of Afghanistan, Harry uses Spare to detail some of the operational specifics of missions he planned when fighting in the country.

He writes about one instance where he plotted an airstrike on a Taliban bunker. For the strike, he was assigned two American pilots to carry it out, who he disagreed with on what type of bomb to use in the attack

The one he wanted to use, he writes, was a 900-kilogram JDAM (Joint Direct Attack Munition) bomb, while the Americans wanted to use a pair of 200-kiliogram bombs. 

This he says was a common request in the British army, saying their motto was to ‘go big or go home’ when fighting. 

The American’s choice, he thought, wouldn’t be enough to bust the bunker. 

He writes how he was convinced that he was right, but as it was his first strike, he says he did not have the confidence to over-rule the Americans.

He goes on to describe the experience of watching the strike being carried out on digital monitors. He explains how he gave the necessary commands to prepare the strike from around three miles away and – when ready – gave the order.

Then, he describes a flash and an explosion on his screen, and watching as the bunker was blown to pieces. A lethal strike was confirmed, he writes.

The same passage also describes how when he was fighting in Afghanistan, he and his fellow soldiers had a laser-like focus on taking out the Taliban, and that the possibility that they could hit a target near civilian centres wasn’t a factor.

Everything, he writes, pointed at the Taliban.

Former Royal Marine Ben McBean, pictured with the prince, who Harry hailed as a 'hero' after he lost an arm and a leg in a bomb blast during the war, urged the duke to 'shut up'

Former Royal Marine Ben McBean, pictured with the prince, who Harry hailed as a ‘hero’ after he lost an arm and a leg in a bomb blast during the war, urged the duke to ‘shut up’

Mr McBean tweeted today: 'Love you #PrinceHarry but you need to shut up! Makes you wonder the people he¿s hanging around with. If it was good people somebody by now would have told him to stop'

Mr McBean tweeted today: ‘Love you #PrinceHarry but you need to shut up! Makes you wonder the people he’s hanging around with. If it was good people somebody by now would have told him to stop’

Former British Army Colonel Richard Kemp yesterday said the Duke of Sussex's decision to spill details in his upcoming autobiography 'Spare' amount to a 'betrayal of the people he fought alongside'

Former British Army Colonel Richard Kemp yesterday said the Duke of Sussex’s decision to spill details in his upcoming autobiography ‘Spare’ amount to a ‘betrayal of the people he fought alongside’

The furious Taliban response to his comments came after Harry was also criticised by military veterans and MPs over the content of the up-coming book.

Former British Army Colonel Richard Kemp said on Thursday that the Duke of Sussex’s writing amounts to a ‘betrayal of the people he fought alongside’.

Mr Kemp’s stark warning came as former Royal Marine Ben McBean, who Harry hailed as a ‘hero’ after he lost an arm and a leg in a bomb blast during the war, urged the duke to ‘shut up’.

Meanwhile Colonel Bob Stewart – a Tory MP who commanded British troops in Bosnia – slammed the comments as ‘distasteful’.   

Mr McBean tweeted today: ‘Love you #PrinceHarry but you need to shut up! Makes you wonder the people he’s hanging around with. If it was good people somebody by now would have told him to stop.’

Meanwhile, the MP for Beckhenham told MailOnline of Harry’s comments: ‘I wonder why he is doing such things. Real soldiers tend to shy away… People I know don’t boast about such things. They rather regret that they have had to do it.’ 

Colonel Stewart, who was awarded the Distinguished Service Order after seven tours of Northern Ireland and leading UN forces in Bosnia, went on: ‘It is also rather sad that a man who has had all these advantages in life seems so intent on destroying himself and the monarchy. 

‘I feel really sad for the King. Because the King is a good man. I have met him a few times, he was my colonel of the regiment. He is a very sensitive decent man and this will be really hurting him a great deal, all this furore.

‘I just think it is so sad because so many people have not had Prince Harry’s chances in life, and the whole thing seems to be a bit tragic.’

Another Tory MP, who did not want to be named, said Harry’s behaviour was ‘bonkers’, adding: ‘He is bringing everything into disrepute.’

How Harry eliminated the ‘bad guys’: As the Prince has divulged in his memoir, he was responsible for ending the lives of 25 insurgents… seeming to leave him emotionally numb 

By Mark Nicol Defence Editor For The Daily Mail

  • Harry was responsible for firing helicopter’s 30mm cannon and Hellfire missiles
  • He said in his memoir Spare that he ended the lives of 25 insurgents
  • Said deaths ‘not a fact that filled me with satisfaction, but…not ashamed either’  
  • He credited this detachment to the military training he undertook beforehand 

Beneath the deafening thud of rotor blades and jet engines, co-pilot ‘Captain Henry Wales’ scanned Helmand Province’s dusty landscape for Taliban, or in his words, ‘baddies to be eliminated’.

Sitting in the cramped front seat of a £45 million Apache, the officer known to the world as Prince Harry, was responsible for firing the helicopter’s 30mm cannon and Hellfire missiles.

A responsibility that would weigh on anyone’s conscience given rounds fired from the cannon could eviscerate any human being in their path. The missiles, guided by Harry’s on-board computer, could destroy any armoured vehicle or a small building.

The barrel of Harry’s cannon, positioned directly beneath the cockpit glided left then right. Enemies were identified and he opened fire, sending the chain-gun’s 23-inch barrel into a furious spin.

Prince Harry, now 38, was responsible for firing the helicopter’s 30mm cannon and Hellfire missiles

Prince Harry, now 38, was responsible for firing the helicopter’s 30mm cannon and Hellfire missiles

Harry told readers the 25 deaths were ‘not a fact that filled me with satisfaction, but I was not ashamed either’

Harry told readers the 25 deaths were ‘not a fact that filled me with satisfaction, but I was not ashamed either’

This moment of impact was captured on grainy footage recorded by a video camera on the AH-64’s undercarriage. On his return to Camp Bastion, the UK’s headquarters in southern Afghanistan, the numbers of enemy gunmen slain by Harry were tallied up.

As Harry, 38, has chosen to divulge in his memoir, he was apparently responsible for ending the lives of 25 insurgents. They are said to have died on six engagements during his 2012-2013 tour of duty.

Based on how he has described this period, the taking of life left him emotionally numb. As he tells readers, their deaths were ‘not a fact that filled me with satisfaction, but I was not ashamed either’.

He credits this detachment to the military training he undertook before taking to the skies over Helmand Province in such a lethal killing machine.

He tells readers his instructors trained me to ‘other’ them’. Consequently, he considered his victims ‘chess pieces’ to be taken off the board, rather than people. Why so? Because in Harry’s words ‘you can’t kill people if you see them as people’.

Such is the nature of combat, most UK troops rarely if ever engaged the Taliban, because their roles did not require them to do so. Of those who did, few can say with surety they shot someone.

Harry suggests aviators can count their kills, thanks to modern technology. Writing in Spare, he assures readers ‘the era of Apaches and laptops’ allows him to share his kills ‘with exactness’.

Last night, the Ministry of Defence said it did not comment on such ‘operational details’ for ‘security reasons’. Seemingly Harry does not feel bound by the same constraints. Quite what his colleagues, in particular his brother officers, make of his admission remains to be seen.

He credited this detachment from the killings to the military training he undertook beforehand

He credited this detachment from the killings to the military training he undertook beforehand

While at the end of his stint as an Apache gunner Harry admitted that he had engaged the enemy, this is the first time he has been so specific about his activities. He has never previously discussed the numbers of Taliban he accounted for. Such a revelation may increase concerns about his personal safety.

He has long been regarded as a terrorist threat, not only people of his royal status but also because of his service in Afghanistan, as a junior officer in a reconnaissance unit in 2007 and in 2012-13 as an Apache pilot.

The irony is, he was never supposed to return to the warzone following his first tour – which was cut short after an Australian magazine broke a media embargo not to report his presence in Afghanistan.

According to senior military sources, Harry was furious when top brass ordered he must come back to Britain. He also demanded to should be able to redeploy to Helmand Province.

But military commanders thought the war against the Taliban was simply too dangerous for Harry, who at the time was third in line to the throne, to return.

A source said: ‘He couldn’t go back with ground forces, air was the only option. Honestly nobody thought he would qualify as an Apache pilot or co-pilot, the course is so difficult and he did not have the science qualifications of most trainee pilots.

‘So we threw him that option saying he could go back as Apache air crew, thinking it would never happen. But not only did he pass all the courses, he came top of his class. The rest is history.’ 

DailyMail

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