Ruler Harry invited cameras into his camp in the Helmand region in 2012, and keeping in mind that giving a visit through his military enclosure, coincidentally found two confidants playing the well known computer game FIFA



A throwaway comment by Prince Harry inspired the ire of the Taliban, during the young prince's second tour of Afghanistan.


Harry welcomed cameras into his camp in the Helmand province in 2012, and while giving a tour of his barracks, stumbled across two comrades playing the popular video game, FIFA.


Asked how he was handling operating military weapons, he then made the tongue-in-cheek comment that was to land him in trouble.


He said it was 'a joy' handling the weapons, adding: "I'm one of those people who loves playing PlayStation and Xbox. So with my thumbs I like to think I’m probably quite useful....You can ask the guys I thrash in FIFA all the time."



Harry at Camp Bastion southern Afghanistan, where he filled in as an Apache Helicopter Pilot/Gunner 


The expendable remark started a backfire and, strangely, even drew a stinging reaction from the Taliban, reports The Mirror. 


After the meetings were communicated, Zabihullah Mujahid, the Taliban's representative, said Harry was a 'defeatist' for just talking after he was out of danger. 



"To portray the conflict in Afghanistan as a game disparages anybody, particularly a ruler, who should be made of better things," he said. 


Taliban warriors stand monitor along a side of the road close to the Zanbaq Square in Kabul on August 16, 2021 


Back home, the meeting was likewise taken advantage of by observers, with Harry Mount writing in The Telegraph that while Army officials might talk nonchalantly in such terms, the youthful solider expected to recollect that he was additionally third-in-line to the seat at that point. 


"He isn't care for different warriors, much as he'd prefer to be," he composed. 


Harry's comments were additionally portrayed as an "superfluous own objective" after he said that Apache helicopter pilots were frequently needed to "end a daily existence to save a day to day existence". 



England's Prince Harry completes a pre-flight check to his Apache helicopter in Camp Bastion, 2012 


A senior official disclosed to The Telegraph: "Nobody in the Army, particularly an official, ought to be so pretentious about taking life. 


"I saw the meetings and figured 'for what reason did you say that?'. He unmistakably has not figured out how to connect with cerebrum before mouth." 


Ruler Harry served two visits in Afghanistan, the 2012 visit and another, in 2008. Per the illustrious family's site, he served in the military for a sum of ten years and rose to the position of Captain. 


The ruler's first visit in quite a while directed stealthily, with the British press consenting to a power outage on detailing.