Meghan shares rare photo of Harry, Archie and Lilibet – after duke’s swipe at King Charles over security row

MEGHAN Markle has posted a rare black and white photo of Harry and the kids following his bombshell tirade about the royal family.
The Duchess of Sussex posted the picture of the trio in the garden with their backs to her, but didn't include a caption.
Meghan, 43, also posted photos of her son, five, and daughter, three, in the rose garden on Instagram a week ago.
Captioning the rare moment, Meghan wrote: "Sunday kind of love….with my little loves."
This was just a day after revealing Lilibet has an adorable American accent.
The mum-of-two has previously posted several clips of them making jam on her Instagram stories.
The uncaptioned social media post today comes in the aftermath of Prince Harry losing his appeal to regain his public-funded security that was axed in Megxit.
Later that day, he appeared on the BBC and unleashed a 30-minute rant blaming the royal family for his defeat.
Insiders told The Sun King Charles had hoped for a reunion with his youngest son and this hinged on his reaction to the court loss.
Hours later, Prince Harry appeared in a TV interview blaming his family for the defeat in his long-running battle over security.
Harry, 40, claimed to want "reconciliation" with his family... before blaming the loss of his multimillion-pound fight on his father.
The raging prince declared: "This whole thing could be resolved through him".
But the father-of-two also revealed in the bombshell interview that King Charles refuses to speak to him "because of this security stuff".
Prince Harry's biggest bombshells:
An insider claimed that Charles was frustrated and upset with his son — and the burden he had put on taxpayers.
Prince Harry had pleaded "my life is at stake" when he brought the case against the Home Office and the Executive Committee for the Protection of Royalty and Public Figures (Ravec).
Harry also claimed stripping him of his security was a plot to force him and Meghan back to Britain.
Sir Geoffrey Vos, Lord Justice Bean and Lord Justice Edis ruled against him in a humiliating blow for the prince.
However Harry could still take the battle to the Supreme Court, and had voiced intention to ask both the Home Secretary and the Prime Minister to step in.
His defeat means he faces paying the legal costs for both sides - an estimated £1.5million.
Changes to his security were introduced in 2020 as he stepped down as a working royal and moved to the United States.
After losing his appeal, Prince Harry said: "The other side have won in keeping me unsafe.
“I can’t see a world in which I will be bringing my wife and children back at this point.”
He chillingly suggested it would be the Firm's fault if anything happened to him or wife Meghan Markle.
He told the BBC that verdict was “a good old-fashioned establishment stitch up”, and blamed the Royal Household for influencing the decision to reduce his security.
Harry later released a statement, saying that the legal action was a last resort but it uncovered "shocking truths".
He claimed that the "Royal Household are key decision-makers on RAVEC".
A Palace Spokesperson said: "All of these issues have been examined repeatedly and meticulously by the courts, with the same conclusion reached on each occasion."
By Emily Jane Davies
FURIOUS Prince Harry has taken another swipe at the royal family, accusing them of being the reason his security was axed after Megxit.
Hours after his astonishing BBC interview, the defeated prince released a second tirade blaming his family for the row.
Harry later released a statement, saying that the legal action was a last resort but it uncovered "shocking truths".
He revealed he will be writing to the Home Secretary to ask her to review the matter.
The 40-year-old claimed that the "Royal Household are key decision-makers on RAVEC".
"Before the Royal Household's role on RAVEC was known, this secretive committee concluded that when my wife would join the royal family, she should not receive protection.
"Only when I asked for the name of the person willing to carry that risk did they reverse the decision."
Speaking of the decision to strip the Sussexes of their security after Megxit, he said: "This reckless action knowingly put me and my family in harm's way. Life is precious and I understand the fragility of it."
The prince went on to say he remains committed to a life of public service and said: "All I've been asking for is safety."
Harry continued: "To this present day, the Royal Household remain my sole representation on RAVEC for every visit and could call for this assessment to be done at any point.
"The only possible conclusion that can be drawn is that they choose not to because they known the outcome would prove that my security should never have been removed in the first place.
"My family and I have been subjected to well-documented neo-Nazi and extremist threats, including from Al-Qaeda."
The prince went on to slam the lack of a risk assessment as a "dereliction of duty".
Harry said he was born into "lifelong circumstances that create inherent security risks" as a royal.
He went on to say his hands have now been tied in seeking "legal recourse against the establishment".
"This all comes from the same institutions that preyed upon my mother, that openly campaigned for the removal of our security, and continue to incite hatred towards me, my wife and even our children, while at the same time protecting the very power that they should be holding accountable."
More to follow... For the latest news on this story keep checking back at The Sun Online
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