In a historic military appointment, Kensington Palace announced that Prince William has officially taken on the role of Colonel-in-Chief of the elite Parachute Regiment—one of the British Army’s most prestigious airborne units. The ceremonial handover took place at Colchester’s Merville Barracks, where the future King, dressed in full regimental mess dress, was greeted with a thunderous round of applause from paratroopers.
The position, previously held by his father King Charles III for 31 years, marks William’s deepening commitment to military service. “This isn’t just ceremonial—it’s personal,” William told the troops, referencing his own decade of service as an RAF search-and-rescue pilot. The regiment’s famous maroon beret now bears the Prince of Wales’ feathers, symbolizing what one veteran called “a seamless passing of the baton to a battle-tested leader.”
The appointment comes as William increasingly assumes more senior royal duties. Military analysts note his hands-on experience with combat veterans through the Invictus Games and Heads Together initiative makes him uniquely qualified for this role. The Paras—known for their daring airborne operations from D-Day to the Falklands—reportedly requested William specifically, with one officer noting, “He’s got the right mix of gravitas and approachability that modern soldiers respect.”