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In this image released on January 21, 2013, Prince Harry makes early morning checks as he sits on an Apache helicopter at the British controlled flight-line at Camp Bastion on Dec. 12, 2012 in Afghanistan. Photo by John Stillwell - WPA Pool /Getty Images
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Prince Harry’s former Army instructor has been left “staggered” by the royal’s account of one of their training flights.
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The Duke of Sussex wrote in his memoir Spare that former Sgt. Maj. Michael Booley deliberately stalled their Slingsby T67 Firefly propeller plane without warning, but he insisted that wasn’t the case because “every single aspect” of the trip would have been mapped out beforehand.
Michael said: “I am staggered by this. In shock even.”
In Spare, Prince Harry wrote: “I felt the left wing dip, a sickening feeling of disorder, of entropy, and then, after several seconds that felt like decades, he recovered the aircraft and levelled the wings.
“I stared at him. What in the absolute–? Was this an aborted suicide attempt? No, he said gently. This was the next stage in my training.”
Michael – who ranks Harry as one of his five best ever students – insisted the account was “inaccurate.”
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He told the Sunday Mirror newspaper: “Whilst the book compliments me, the recollection of the sorties and lessons is inaccurate, I’m afraid. It’s important to highlight that nothing in the cockpit comes as a surprise.
“Every sortie is thoroughly briefed beforehand, every single aspect.
“The sortie is flown exactly as per that brief. The only time there are surprises is later in the syllabus, not as stated in the book, when emergencies are introduced.
“Engine failures are practised before the first solo obviously, in case the student suffers one.”
The 57-year-old former soldier questioned the “dramatization” of Harry’s military flights, and suggested it could be down to the prince’s ghostwriter, John Joseph Moehringer.
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He added: “I think the reference to the flying sorties has been dramatized. I think it’s a result of the ghost writing. I never called him Lieut. Wales, he was an officer, and I called him Sir.”
Despite his criticism of the book, Michael – who served in the military for 22 years – has a lot of “respect” for Harry.
He said: “He was an exceptional student, very talented indeed. He is a friend and a man I respect immensely who would always have my ear.”
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