Mail: The FBI heard that Prince Philip was involved in the 1960s Profumo Affair

The late Prince Philip cheated on his wife all the time. But it was a different time. I’m not making excuses or anything, but it was truly a different time and QEII and Philip had an arrangement. I don’t doubt that they loved each other dearly, but they had different interests and they found stimulation in completely different ways. Philip was a very curious man and he liked to meet all kinds of different people. Back in the 1960s, he hung out with all kinds of seedy types, aristocrats, drug dealers, artists, bohemians, and politicians. This was featured on The Crown as well – there were definitely questions, at the time, about whether Philip had been intimately involved in what was known as the Profumo Affair. Christine Keeler, John Profumo, sex parties, hookers, scandals, etc. There was a ton of overlap between Philip’s circle of friends and the Profumo Affair participants. Well, now the Mail says that the FBI was even aware of Philip’s alleged connections to some of those people.

His role in one of the most notorious scandals of the 20th century has long been a source of speculation. Now the Mail on Sunday can reveal that Prince Philip was named in top-secret FBI documents about the Profumo affair in the early 1960s. The papers show the FBI had been told the Duke of Edinburgh was personally ‘involved’ with Christine Keeler and Mandy Rice-Davies, the two women at the centre of the sex scandal that brought down the government.

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Files from the US Department of Justice show the crucial memo was written by J Edgar Hoover, then director of the FBI – and it can be revealed after a five-year quest by the MoS seeking relevant documents under American freedom of information laws.

At the heart of the scandal was the married secretary of state for war John Profumo, who had denied in the Commons in March 1963 that he had a sexual relationship with teenage showgirl Keeler. He was forced to resign months later when proof of the affair became public. The scandal had national security implications because Keeler was also sleeping with Russian military attache Yevgeny Ivanov.

In the fallout, well-connected osteopath Stephen Ward, who had introduced Keeler to Profumo at a party, was charged with living off the immoral earnings of Keeler and her friend Rice-Davies. He took a fatal overdose and died three days after he was convicted.

In the newly disclosed document, Thomas Corbally, a US businessman involved in industrial espionage, who agreed to be interviewed by the FBI about his friendship with Ward, makes the claim about Philip. A cable sent by Hoover to the US embassy in London on June 20, 1963 reads: ‘Corbally also stated there was a rumour Prince Philip may have been involved with these two girls.’

Philip’s links to the Profumo affair formed a key storyline in the Netflix series The Crown. Sir Anthony Blunt, the Queen’s curator of art later disclosed to be a Soviety spy, warns Philip that he will expose his relationship with Ward when the Duke tackles him over his treachery. In his evidence to the FBI, Corbally said he did not believe the charges against Ward.

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[From The Daily Mail]

Is this even a low-stakes conspiracy at this point, given that Philip has passed? Like, he was absolutely involved with that whole circle. He knew Stephen Ward and I’m sure Philip had partied with Christine Keeler and everyone else in that group. The scandal, to me, is that it was all so thoroughly hushed up, and that Ward mysteriously and conveniently died when he did. The coverup is what implies Philip’s deeper involvement. As do some other stories.

Photos courtesy of Avalon Red, IMAGO/United Archives / WHA / Avalon, UPPA/Photoshot / Avalon, John Shelley Collection / Avalon, STARSTOCK/Photoshot / Avalon.






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