It began as a serious initiative rooted in service, born from the idea that wounded, injured, & sick service personnel deserve more than sympathy. They deserve community, recovery, competition, recognition, and real long term support. It was built using a strong institutional framework and credibility, launched with serious backing, and introduced to the world as a mission driven platform for veterans to reclaim strength and purpose through sport.
That is what made Invictus powerful.
And yet today, the Games are at risk of losing public trust because the focus keeps drifting away from the competitors and toward the personal reputations and publicity needs Harry& Meghan Markle.
Invictus belongs to the veterans. Not to a couple with dwindling credibility.
In recent years, public discussion around Invictus has increasingly been hijacked by manufactured storylines that have nothing to do with the athletes. The event is repeatedly framed around photo opportunities, headlines, outfits, staged moments, and strategic media narratives.
That is not service. That is branding.
And veterans should never be treated as supporting characters in somebody else’s PR campaign.
Invictus is respected because it has always been bigger than one person.
But when the Games become tied to polarising figures who generate controversy everywhere they go, the entire brand suffers.
The harm is real and measurable:
•The competitors get sidelined while headlines revolve around celebrity attention
•Sponsors and partners face reputational risk from constant drama
•The Games start to look like a stage rather than a service organisation
•Public goodwill erodes because people recognise the pattern and feel manipulated
•The mission gets diluted and the athletes lose the spotlight they earned
The most painful part is this: the athletes pay the price for someone else’s obsession with relevance.
Harry and Meghan are the distraction, not the solution
Invictus does not need them. Invictus needs stability, credibility, and leadership that treats the competitors with dignity.
A serious organisation does not need Netflix energy, influencer theatrics, or performative displays of compassion.
What it needs is a veteran centred platform that feels disciplined, respectful, and mission first.
Because real service is not loud. It is consistent. It is humble. It is reliable.
Harry and Meghan do not bring that. They bring headlines, tantrums, manufactured narratives, and a constant need to control the story.
That is the opposite of what wounded veterans deserve.
What Invictus should do now
If the Invictus Games Foundation cares about its future and integrity, there is a clear way forward.
1.Publicly re-centre the athletes
Make veterans the main story again. Not the celebrity entourage.
2.Stop entertaining external family narratives
No more royal attendance speculation. No more “coaxing” storylines. No more media games.
3.Separate the mission from polarising personalities
If someone’s presence repeatedly causes distraction, the organisation must be brave enough to move on.
4.Build a veteran led public identity
Let competitors, recovery programmes, and long term support services be the face of Invictus.
Final word
Invictus was created to uplift those who served and sacrificed. It was built to restore strength, pride, and community to veterans who have already endured enough.
They should never be used as props for personal relevance or proximity tactics.
If Invictus wants to protect its future, it must protect its mission.
Drop the celebrity circus.
Stop rewarding manipulation.
Stop letting the Games be used as a PR shield.
Protect the mission. Put veterans first. Stop the PR exploitation.
Do right by the veterans.
