The Sunday Telegraph

Duchess thanks military ‘for all you sacrifice’

To mark Armed Forces Day, Kate shares pictures of action-packed time spent with the Army

- By Patrick Sawer and Victoria Ward

THE Duchess of Cambridge thanked “the brave men and women” of the Armed Forces for their sacrifice when she joined squaddies in learning some of the skills they need on the front line.

New pictures released to mark Armed Forces Day show the Duchess visiting Pirbright Training last November and spending time with the 101 Operationa­l Sustainmen­t Brigade at Abingdon Airfield.

There she got to grips with some of the tasks demanded of recruits, including hitching up a trailer and sitting at the controls of an armoured vehicle.

The Duchess took part in training exercises and spent time talking to personnel about their experience­s in the British Army. In a statement posted to the official Twitter account of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge yesterday, she praised the members of the military, saying: “Today on Armed Forces Day, William and I would like to pay tribute to the brave men and women, past and present, serving in all of our armed forces, at sea, on land and in the air, here in the UK and around the world.

“Thank you for all you and your families sacrifice to keep us safe.”

The Duchess added: “Last year, I was honoured to spend time with the British Army to see how they train serving personnel and new recruits.

“It was wonderful to see first-hand the many important and varied roles the military play day in, day out to protect us all.”

Similar high-profile engagement­s for the Duchess may be designed to pave the way for her to be given the patronage of a military regiment, in line with other members of the Royal family.

She has been spoken of as a potential replacemen­t for the Duke of York after he was forced to give up his role as a colonel of the Grenadier Guards when he stepped away from public life in November 2019. There is said to be widespread support for the idea among the regiment’s ranks.

A source with the Grenadier Guards said recently: “We all admire the way she has fitted in and behaved, she never seems to put a foot wrong. Everything she has taken on she really commits to, and we want someone who will really engage with us.”

If confirmed, the Duchess, 40, would be the first female colonel of the regiment in 80 years since the Queen, then Princess Elizabeth, held the role in 1942.

She already attends military functions alongside her husband Prince William, who is Colonel of the Irish Guards, accompanyi­ng him to various medal parades and events in honour of the regiment.

The Duchess has also taken the salute at the Household Division’s Beating Retreat on Horse Guards Parade in London. Many members of the Royal family have military experience, but it is not a requiremen­t of being appointed colonel of a regiment.

ATC Pirbright delivers the 14-week training course known as the Common Military Syllabus, which is completed by all adult recruits aged 17 and over when they join the Army. The demanding course, elements of which were explained to the Duchess during her visit, includes fieldcraft, handling arms, fitness training, military knowledge and battlefiel­d casualty drills.

Writing about the rigours of the course on an Army noticeboar­d one former recruit said: “Basic will be hard, and there might be times where you want to give up. Be prepared for aches, pains and sleep deprivatio­n.”

Another wrote: “It is hard, but it is supposed to ensure you have the basic skills to start a harder level of training after that. There is some bull, but they have to put you under pressure to see how you behave.”

Prince Edward, Duke of Kent, and Ben Wallace, the Defence Secretary, visited Scarboroug­h as part of the Armed Forces Day national event yesterday. The event, which drew tens of thousands, was meant to be held in the summers of 2020 and 2021 but was twice postponed due to uncertaint­y surroundin­g the pandemic.

The Duke of Kent is the Queen’s cousin and was recently pictured alongside Her Majesty as part of the Platinum Jubilee celebratio­ns on the Buckingham Palace balcony.

‘Last year I was honoured to spend time with the British Army to see how they train serving personnel and recruits’

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 ?? ?? The Duchess released images from her visit to Pirbright Training and Abingdon Airfield, above; the Queen tinkers with an engine during ATS training, right
The Duchess released images from her visit to Pirbright Training and Abingdon Airfield, above; the Queen tinkers with an engine during ATS training, right

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