800 SOLDIERS. 6 MONTHS IN ESTONIA. BUT WHAT THE FEMALE TROOPS TOLD WILLIAM CHANGED THE ROOM. Prince William showed up at Bulford Camp in full camouflage and regimental beret — not as a royal, but as Colonel-in-Chief of the 1st Battalion The Mercian Regiment. He sat down with Captain Maria Bell, head of the Mercian Female Network, and a group of women serving across engineering, medicine, and administration. Only 40 women among 800 soldiers. What they shared about life inside the British Army wasn’t rehearsed — it was real. Bell told him the Army had made progress on its zero-tolerance policy, but called parts of the training still a “tick-box exercise.” William didn’t flinch. He listened. He asked what he could personally do to make things better. Then something shifted. He raised a new initiative — regular gatherings designed to connect servicewomen, especially those with no female presence in their chain of command. The women called it “welcomed.” Captain Bell later said quietly: “He was genuinely interested in what we were saying.” And somehow, that single line said everything about what happened inside that room.
800 Soldiers, 6 Months in Estonia, and the Conversation That Changed the Room At Bulford Camp, the atmosphere was serious…