When excerpts from a new royal book began making the rounds, most expected the Duke and Duchess of Sussex to either stay silent or brush it off with grace. Instead, their spokesperson fired back with a pointed and detailed statement, and now a public relations expert is questioning whether that move hurt more than it helped.
The book in question comes from a well-known critic of the couple, and its latest claims quickly found their way into a prominent British publication. Rather than letting the coverage fade, Harry and Meghan’s team chose to engage, pushing back firmly and at length against the allegations. It was a decision that, on the surface, seemed like a show of strength. But in the world of strategic communications, strength and perception are rarely the same thing.
For a couple who has spent years navigating one of the most scrutinized public profiles in the world, the choice to respond at length rather than in silence raises a familiar and uncomfortable question. When does defending yourself stop being empowering and start becoming counterproductive?
A statement that said too much
The response called out the author directly, framing his commentary as something that had long moved past criticism into an unhealthy fixation. It even cited language the author had reportedly used in the past to argue that his motivations were personal rather than journalistic. The statement was sharp, detailed, and clearly crafted with intention.
For some, the rebuttal may have read as confident and necessary. But for Renae Smith, a public relations strategist and founder of a communications firm, the approach revealed a critical miscalculation. She told a British outlet that the sheer level of detail in the statement made the couple appear far more unsettled than they likely intended.
Her argument is rooted in a fundamental PR principle. When something is widely seen as baseless or absurd, the most powerful response is often the shortest one. A brief, almost unbothered dismissal sends a clear message that the claims are not worth the energy. A lengthy rebuttal, on the other hand, can signal the opposite. It tells the audience that the claims landed, that they stung, and that the subject feels compelled to address them in full.
In that sense, the length of the statement may have communicated more than the words themselves ever intended to.
Meghan and the art of strategic silence
Smith suggested the couple could have issued something simple and sharp, just a single line indicating they would not dignify the claims with a response. That kind of restraint, she argued, would have projected far more confidence and kept the focus squarely on the author and his book.
Instead, by providing so much context and detail, the statement shifted the conversation. Suddenly, the question was not what the book said but why the couple felt so compelled to respond the way they did. The rebuttal, in trying to discredit the source, inadvertently gave the story longer legs and a wider audience than it might otherwise have found on its own.
This is not the first time the Sussexes have found themselves navigating the complicated terrain between defending their reputation and amplifying the very narratives they want to silence. Living largely outside the traditional royal structure while still deeply tied to its press cycle means every response carries weight and risk in equal measure. The media ecosystem that surrounds the royal family does not reward restraint, but it does not always reward engagement either. For Harry and Meghan, there rarely seems to be a clean path forward.
The pattern behind the response
What makes this moment worth examining is not just the statement itself but what it reflects about the broader challenge the couple faces. Since stepping back from their senior royal roles, they have walked a difficult line between protecting their narrative and feeding the very machine that produces stories about them. Every interview, every project, and now every official response becomes material for the next round of coverage.
The communications approach they have employed over the years has sometimes worked brilliantly in their favor, helping them tell their own story on their own terms. But it has also, at times, created openings for the kind of analysis that shifts attention away from what they are saying and toward how and why they are saying it. This latest episode appears to fall into that second category.
The cost of being heard
There is something deeply human about wanting to correct the record, especially when the claims feel unfair or personally motivated. The instinct to push back, to make clear that something is false or misleading, is not a weakness. It is a natural response to feeling attacked. But the world of public relations often demands the counterintuitive. Saying less, or nothing at all, can be the loudest statement of all.
For public figures operating at the level of the Sussexes, that calculation is never simple. Silence can be misread as acceptance. Engagement can be misread as anxiety. There is no formula that guarantees the right outcome, only judgment calls made in real time with imperfect information about how the public will receive them.
Whether Harry and Meghan will recalibrate their communications approach going forward remains to be seen. What is clear is that in the ongoing battle over their public image, even the responses designed to protect them can sometimes become the story itself. And in a media landscape that is always hungry for the next development, that is a cycle that shows no sign of slowing down.

