I CARRIED A SMALLย overnight bag containing a few personal items, plus one standard-size ironing board, slung jauntily under my arm like a surfboard. The
Army had ordered me to bring it. From here on my shirts and trousers would need to be crease-free.
I knew as much about operating an ironing board as I did about operating a tank
โless, actually. But that was now the Armyโs problem. I was now the Armyโs problem.
I wished them luck.
So did Pa. It was he who dropped me off in Camberley, Surrey, at the Royal Military Academy at Sandhurst.
May 2005.
He stood to one side and watched me put on my red name tag,ย WALES, then sign in. He told reporters how proud he was.
Then extended his hand.ย Off you go, darling boy.
Photo op. Click.
I was assigned to a platoon of twenty-nine young men and women. Early the next day, after pulling on our new combats, we filed into an ancient room, hundreds of years old. You could smell the historyโit seemed to come off the wood-paneled walls like steam. We recited an oath to the Queen.ย I swear allegiance to Crown and countryโฆThe lad beside me shot an elbow into my ribs.ย Bet you say Granny rather than Queen!
That was the last time, for the next five weeks, that he or anyone else would venture a joke. There was nothing funny about boot camp.
Boot campโsuch a benign name for what happened. We were pushed to our limits, physically, mentally, spiritually. We were takenโor draggedโto a place beyond our limits, and then a bit further, by a stolid group of lovable sadists called color sergeants. Large, loud, extremely masculine menโand yet they all had tiny little dogs. Iโve never heard or read an explanation for this, and I canโt venture one. Iโll only say that it was odd to see these testosterone-rich, mostly bald ogres cooing at their poodles, shih tzus and pugs.
Iโd say they treated us like dogs, except they treated their dogs so much better. With us they never said:ย Thereโs a good boy!ย They got up in our faces, shouted at us through the clouds of their aftershave, and never, ever let up. They belittled us, harassed us, shrieked at us, and made no secret of their intent. They meant to break us.
If they couldnโt break us, brilliant. Welcome to the Army! If they could, even better. Better to know now. Better thatย theyย should break us than the enemy.
They used a variety of approaches. Physical duress, psychological intimidation
โand humor? I remember one color sergeant pulling me aside.ย Mr. Wales, I was on guard one day at Windsor Castle, wearing my bearskin, and along came a boy who kicked gravel on my boots! And that boyโฆwas YOU!
He was joking, but I wasnโt sure I should laugh, and I wasnโt sure it was true. I didnโt recognize him, and I certainly didnโt remember kicking gravel on any guardsmen. But if itย wasย true, I apologized and hoped we could put it behind us.
Within two weeks several cadets had tapped out. We woke to find their beds made, their stuff gone. No one thought less of them. This shit wasnโt for
everybody. Some of my fellow cadets would confess, before lights out, that they feared being next.
I never did, however. I was, for the most part, fine. Boot camp was no picnic, but I never wavered in my belief that I was exactly where I was meant to be. They canโt break me, I thought. Is it, I wondered, because Iโm already broken?
Also, no matter what they did to us, it was done away from the press, so for me every day was a kind of holiday. The training center was like Club H. No matter what the color sergeants dished out, there was always, always the compensatory bonus of no paps. Nothing could really hurt me in a place where the press couldnโt find me.
And then they found me. A reporter fromย The Sunย sneaked onto the grounds and shambled around, holding a phony bomb, trying to proveโwhat? No one knew.ย The Sunย said their reporter, this faux flรขneur, was trying to expose the training centerโs lax security, to prove that Prince Harry was in danger.
The truly scary part was that some readers actually believed their rubbish.