Some Britons are furious after learning Prince William used a military helicopter to fly to a stag party, but the British Defence Ministry insists the Friday afternoon
jaunt was a "legitimate" training exercise.The 25-year-old prince took off in a Royal Air Force Chinook helicopter for a three-day party on the Isle of Wight sometime
Friday, hours after receiving his wings from his father, Prince Charles.
As part of his 80-minute flight, he also stopped at the Woolwich Army barracks to pick up his brother, Prince Harry.
The party was stag celebration for the princes' cousin Peter Phillips, who is marrying Montrealer Autumn Kelly next month. Phillips, at 30 the Queen's eldest grandson,
met Kelly, a 29-year-old management consultant, at the Canadian Grand Prix in Montreal in 2003.
Media reports said that by flying, William avoided seven hours of driving in rush hour traffic and a ferry wait, allowing him to land at about 4 p.m. local time for a
weekend of touring the island's pubs and clubs. The Chinook was flown back to its base by an RAF crew.
Members of Parliament and the Taxpayers' Association blasted the trip, saying it was inappropriate for the prince to employ a military helicopter as a party-going taxi
service. They noted it costs about 5,000 pounds to keep a Chinook in the air for an hour, and British troops in Afghanistan are short on the aircraft. The Taxpayers'
Alliance said it was "jaw-dropping" that such a trip was given approval.
However, on Tuesday, the Defence Ministry said the flight had always been planned as part of William's training, to make up for a missed training session for flying over
water. "Prince William flew a legitimate training sortie which tested his new skills to the limit," a ministry spokesman told the London Telegraph.