The Taliban's hunt for Prince Harry: A guide

The British royal embarks on a four-month tour as a helicopter gunner, and insurgents waste little time before vowing to capture or kill him

Prince Harry gives the thumbs up while at Camp Bastion, Afghanistan, on Sept. 7: The British royal's second tour has been met by death threats from the Taliban.
(Image credit: REUTERS/John Stillwell)

Prince Harry has gone "from playing games of strip pool and cavorting with Olympic stars to receiving death threats," says Daniel Politi at Slate. Such is the life of a British royal — or at least Prince Harry, who touched down in Afghanistan's volatile Helmand province late last week for a four-month tour manning the guns in an Apache attack helicopter. On Monday, Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said Harry is now one of the group's top targets, telling Reuters, "We are using all our strength to get rid of him, either by killing or kidnapping.... We have informed our commanders in Helmand to do whatever they can to eliminate him." How serious of a threat is this? Here, a brief look at the Taliban's hunt for Prince Harry:

Why is the Taliban so focused on Prince Harry?

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