
Prince Andrew’s involvement with an alleged Chinese spy came at a time his chief aide and other royals believed his reputation was “irrecoverable”.
Previously secret documents detail how ex-advisor Dominic Hampshire saw Yang Tengbo as Andrew’s “only light at the end of the tunnel” after his Newsnight interview in 2019.
The documents also reveal details of Andrew’s “communication channel” with China’s President Xi Jinping – including sending an annual birthday letter – and how MI5 intervened to block contact between Andrew and the alleged spy.
The documents were disclosed after the and other media outlets pushed for them to be released by the courts.
Mr Yang has denied all wrongdoing.
Newly released papers include Mr Hampshire’s full witness statement which he wrote in support of Mr Yang, and which he sought to keep private.
According to Mr Hampshire’s statement, the prince’s “communication channel” with the Chinese president was largely used to promote his Pitch@Palace start-up business initiative in China.
He said that because of “cultural differences”, Mr Yang helped him draft letters to Xi, including in relation to plans for the Eurasia Fund, an investment vehicle which Andrew was seeking to raise funds for.
But the witness statement insisted there was “nothing to hide” in these exchanges – and they were full of “top-level nothingness”, such as birthday wishes.

Mr Hampshire said the late Queen Elizabeth II knew about the contact and they were “perhaps even encouraged”.
He described Andrew as a “valuable communication point with China” – though the document reveals that Mr Hampshire thought “China would prefer a different royal.”
Commenting on the mood in the Palace after Andrew’s Newsnight interview in 2019, which saw him probed over his friendship with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, Mr Hampshire said it was “clear” the duke’s “reputation was irrecoverable”.
Mr Yang has lived in the UK since 2002 and became a trusted confidant to Andrew in the wake of the interview.
The fallout from the interview led the prince to withdraw from public duties and led to the end of Pitch@Palace events in the UK and China.
In December, the Special Immigration Appeals Commission (Siac) said Mr Yang had formed an “unusual degree of trust” with Andrew.
It found Mr Yang had not disclosed his links to an arm of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) which is involved in clandestine “political interference”.
That term is used for suspected Chinese state agents who use their position to secretly influence key decision-makers in the British state, including politicians, academics and business leaders.
These agents aim to subtly and slowly make key figures amenable to the aims of the CCP in a long-term operation often referred to as “elite capture”.
It was previously revealed Mr Hampshire credited Mr Yang with salvaging Andrew’s reputation in China.