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Prince William delves into UK鈥檚 secretive spy world

Prince William delves into UK's secretive spy world

Britain鈥檚 Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, meets family members of the officers and guardsmen of the 1st Battalion Irish Guards after the St Patrick鈥檚 Day parade, at Cavalry Barracks in Hounslow, west London, on March 17, 2019. AFP

LONDON, United Kingdom 鈥 The name鈥檚 Windsor. William Windsor.

As one of the most recognizable public figures in the world, Britain鈥檚 Prince William would not make as effective a 007 as legendary fictional spy James Bond.

But that did not stop the heir to the British throne spending the last three weeks working with the security services, including in Bond鈥檚 own foreign intelligence unit MI6.

The Duke of Cambridge ended the top-secret attachment 鈥 which also included a week with domestic intelligence service MI5 and cybersecurity agency GCHQ 鈥 on Saturday, according to Kensington Palace.

鈥淪pending time inside our security and intelligence agencies, understanding more about the vital contribution they make to our national security, was a truly humbling experience,鈥 William said in a statement.

鈥淭hese agencies are full of people from everyday backgrounds doing the most extraordinary work to keep us safe.鈥

The prince, who has a military background, began the secondment at the Secret Intelligence Service (SIS) 鈥 better known as MI6 鈥 whose spies work around the world gathering information and furthering British interests.

William, 36, 鈥済ot to see first-hand how SIS helps the UK identify and exploit opportunities as well as navigate risks to its national security, military effectiveness and economy,鈥 Kensington Palace said.

The father-of-three then switched over to the Security Service 鈥 MI5 鈥 to observe how counter-terrorism teams conduct investigations, including surveillance.

The duke finished his foray into spycraft at the communications monitoring agency GCHQ in Cheltenham, in western England.

There he spent time 鈥渨ith those using cutting-edge technology, technical ingenuity and wide-ranging partnerships to identify, analyze and disrupt threats,鈥 the palace added.

GCHQ鈥檚 head of counter-terrorism operations, whose name was given only as David, said the prince had worked 鈥渆xceptionally hard to embed himself in the team鈥.

He added William had 鈥渃omfortably held his own amongst some highly skilled analysts and operators鈥.

The prince is no stranger to the world of security.

After graduating in 2005 from university in St Andrews in Scotland, he spent seven and a half years in the military, before completing active service as a search and rescue helicopter pilot. /cbb

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