View this post on Instagram 🇬🇧🇳🇴 The Duke of Sussex, Captain General @RoyalMarines, visited Exercise Clockwork to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the operation in Bardufoss, Norway. The Duke met specialist aircrew and engineers, finding out more about their experiences of flying with the Royal Marines in the Arctic Circle – before cutting a special cake to mark the operation's 50th anniversary, and thanked both Brits and Norwegians for their collaborative work over the past 50 years. Clockwork is the traditional name of the Royal Marines' annual winter exercise, based in one of the world’s most demanding environments 200 miles inside the Arctic Circle, which has trained over 16,000 Royal Marines and Royal Navy sailors and airmen since 1969. #RoyalMarines #ExerciseClockwork 📷 Kensington Palace A post shared by Kensington Palace (@kensingtonroyal) on Feb 14, 2019 at 9:04am PST
🇬🇧🇳🇴 The Duke of Sussex, Captain General @RoyalMarines, visited Exercise Clockwork to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the operation in Bardufoss, Norway. The Duke met specialist aircrew and engineers, finding out more about their experiences of flying with the Royal Marines in the Arctic Circle – before cutting a special cake to mark the operation's 50th anniversary, and thanked both Brits and Norwegians for their collaborative work over the past 50 years. Clockwork is the traditional name of the Royal Marines' annual winter exercise, based in one of the world’s most demanding environments 200 miles inside the Arctic Circle, which has trained over 16,000 Royal Marines and Royal Navy sailors and airmen since 1969. #RoyalMarines #ExerciseClockwork 📷 Kensington Palace
A post shared by Kensington Palace (@kensingtonroyal) on Feb 14, 2019 at 9:04am PST