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Prince Harry has furiously slammed down accusations that he ‘boasted’ about killing 25 Taliban fighters in his explosive memoir Spare – while accusing his critics of ‘spinning’ his words and spouting ‘lies’ about the revelation, which he says have put his family ‘in danger’. 

The 38-year-old vehemently defended his decision to share the information as he sat down for an interview with The Late Show host Stephen Colbert – a pre-taped chat that was recorded on Monday night and is due to be aired in full this evening. 

In a teaser clip for what will no doubt be another bombshell TV tell-all, Harry hit back at accusations that he ‘undermined his own security’ by writing about his Taliban kills, while blaming his critics for spreading ‘dangerous lies’ and ‘spinning his words’. 

‘I think one of… the most dangerous lies that they have told is that I somehow boasted about the number of people I have killed in Afghanistan,’ he told Colbert. 

‘I would say that if I heard anybody else, anyone, boasting about that kind of thing, I would be angry. But it’s a lie.

He added: ‘My words are not dangerous, but the spin of my words are very dangerous to my family.’

Prince Harry has furiously slammed down accusations that he 'boasted' about killing 25 Taliban fighters in his explosive memoir Spare during an interview with Stephen Colbert

Prince Harry has furiously slammed down accusations that he ‘boasted’ about killing 25 Taliban fighters in his explosive memoir Spare during an interview with Stephen Colbert

The Duke of Sussex faced serious criticism from politicians and senior former military members alike after leaked excerpts from his book – which were published after the book was accidentally released early in Spain – revealed his recollections of killing Taliban members while he was serving as an Apache helicopter pilot. 

After the excerpts were published last week, former British Army commander Colonel Richard Kemp described Harry’s comments as ‘ill-judged’ warned that his admissions could cause pro-Taliban sympathizers to be ‘provoked to attempt revenge’ against him and possibly ‘incite some people to attempt an attack on British soldiers anywhere in the world’.

Meanwhile, former Royal Marine commando Ben McBean suggested the Duke had broken an ‘unwritten rule’ with his revelation. 

However, Harry insisted to Colbert that it was not his words that were in any way dangerous – but rather the ‘spin’ that his critics have put on them, with the Duke saying it is ‘a choice they have made’, which has put his family in danger. 

He went on to insist that that the ‘reason’ he chose to write about his kill count was to ‘reduce the number of suicides’ among military veterans. 

‘I made a choice to share it because, having spent nearly two decades working with veterans all around the world, I think the most important thing is to be honest and to give space to others to share their experiences without any shame,’ he said – while receiving applause from the audience, which included several veterans. 

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‘And my whole goal, my attempt with sharing that detail is to reduce the number of suicides.’

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

'I think one of... the most dangerous lies that they have told is that I somehow boasted about the number of people I have killed in Afghanistan ,' he told Colbert

‘I think one of… the most dangerous lies that they have told is that I somehow boasted about the number of people I have killed in Afghanistan ,’ he told Colbert

The Duke enjoyed a glass of tequila alongside Colbert as the pair recorded their chat

The Duke enjoyed a glass of tequila alongside Colbert as the pair recorded their chat 

The father-of-two, who during his second tour flew an Apache attack helicopter, said it was ‘not a fact that filled me with satisfaction but I was not ashamed either’.  

Harry took part in two tours in Afghanistan, the first from 2007 to 2008 and the second from 2012 to 2012. 

In Spare, the Prince said that he flew on six missions that resulted in the ‘taking of human lives’.

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. 

The Duke has continued to speak out about his time in the military – and his decision to write so publicly about his experiences – during a series of interviews in which he has been plugging his memoir, which was officially published today. 

This morning, just over 12 hours before his sit-down with Colbert is set to air, People magazine published an interview with Harry in which he justified his decision to share his kill count, saying it was part of his own personal ‘healing’. 

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