Princess Diana’s Former Bodyguard Reveals 3 Critical Mistakes That Led to Her Tragic Death

Accord­ing to Ken Wharfe, Princess Diana’s for­mer body­guard, three crit­i­cal secu­ri­ty fail­ures played a sig­nif­i­cant role in her trag­ic pass­ing. It’s dif­fi­cult to believe that near­ly 30 years have passed since the untime­ly death of Princess Diana. The world lost not only an icon­ic fig­ure and a ded­i­cat­ed human­i­tar­i­an but also two young boys who lost their moth­er. It’s nat­ur­al to won­der what she would be like today—how she would look, what role she would play, and how she might have con­tin­ued to shape the world.

A Dangerous Driver Behind the Wheel

Ken Wharfe, who served as her body­guard for six years, remem­bers Princess Diana with deep affec­tion. Wharfe, who worked as her per­son­al pro­tec­tion offi­cer from 1987 to 1993, believes that the People’s Princess might still be alive today if cer­tain deci­sions had been han­dled dif­fer­ent­ly. One of the most crit­i­cal mis­takes, accord­ing to Wharfe, was the choice of dri­ver on that fate­ful August night in 1997.

Diana was trav­el­ing with her boyfriend, Egypt­ian film pro­duc­er Dodi Fayed, Ritz secu­ri­ty chief Hen­ri Paul, who was behind the wheel, and Dodi’s body­guard, Trevor Rees-Jones, the sole sur­vivor of the crash. Trag­i­cal­ly, Paul had con­sumed alco­hol before dri­ving and was oper­at­ing the vehi­cle at dan­ger­ous­ly high speeds when it col­lid­ed with the 13th pil­lar of the Pont de l’Alma tun­nel in Paris. Wharfe is con­vinced that Diana’s life could have been spared if some­one else had been dri­ving that night.

A Fatal Attempt to Outsmart the Paparazzi

Diana and Dodi ini­tial­ly planned to trav­el a short dis­tance from the Ritz Hotel to an apart­ment near the Champs-Elysées. Anoth­er major mis­step that evening was the lack of prop­er plan­ning and coordination—or, more accu­rate­ly, the com­plete absence of communication—with local author­i­ties regard­ing the route and secu­ri­ty arrange­ments.

Wharfe believes the tragedy could have been entire­ly avoid­ed if Dodi and Diana’s secu­ri­ty team had col­lab­o­rat­ed with local police instead of iso­lat­ing them and treat­ing the press as “the ene­my.” In an attempt to evade the paparazzi, they devised a plan involv­ing decoy vehi­cles. A Range Rover was sta­tioned at the front entrance of the Ritz, with Dodi’s usu­al dri­ver at the wheel, while Diana and Dodi exit­ed through the rear in a black armored Mer­cedes.

Hen­ri Paul, who was four times over the legal alco­hol lim­it in France, had been called from his home to dri­ve them. The high-speed chase that fol­lowed end­ed in cat­a­stro­phe, with the Mer­cedes crash­ing at near­ly 60 mph.

The Absence of a Security Team

Wharfe con­sid­ers Diana’s deci­sion to dis­miss her Scot­land Yard secu­ri­ty team as the most sig­nif­i­cant and avoid­able mis­take. After her sep­a­ra­tion from Prince Charles in 1992, she even­tu­al­ly gave up her roy­al pro­tec­tion detail. Despite Wharfe’s warn­ings, Diana let go of her entire secu­ri­ty team just four weeks lat­er. He is cer­tain that if Queen Eliz­a­beth had insist­ed she retain them, Diana would have com­plied.

Diana’s pass­ing sent shock­waves across the globe, dom­i­nat­ing head­lines for weeks. While her funer­al became a his­toric moment of col­lec­tive grief, the haunt­ing images of her wrecked car remain etched in the mem­o­ries of many.

More than two decades lat­er, the debate over what could have saved Diana con­tin­ues. For Ken Wharfe, how­ev­er, the answers are clear: three cru­cial deci­sions that night ulti­mate­ly sealed her fate. Do you agree with his assess­ment?

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