Fury at Sussexes' Netflix claim of 'war on Meghan' in bombshell new trailer trends now Incendiary claims by Prince Harry of ‘a war against Meghan’ sparked a furious backlash last night. In a trailer for their new documentary, he alleged the couple had suffered from leaks and planted stories that backed up the Royal Family ‘hierarchy’. Allies told the six-hour series on Netflix there was ‘a war against Meghan to suit other people’s agendas’, with one claiming ‘it’s about hatred, it’s about race’. In clips for the show, Harry, 38, took aim at royal aides, smirking as he commented: ‘It’s a dirty game.’ But royal sources insisted it was ‘absolutely wrong’ to suggest Harry and Meghan had been briefed against and ‘unprecedented steps’ had been taken to support them. The new trailer gave the clearest signal yet that the California-based pair will reopen old wounds as they seek to justify why they quit as working royals and left Britain. During the teaser, a friend is heard claiming that the couple's experience has been 'about hatred, about race' as a strikingly intimate and previously unseen clip flashes up of an exasperated Harry, 38, holding a hand to his face as Meghan passes behind him while heavily pregnant with their daughter, Lili Incendiary claims by Prince Harry of ‘a war against Meghan’ sparked a furious backlash last night. Meghan is seen wiping her eyes as a worried Harry watches on. A similar scene also appeared in the first teaser There is hope among the family that the 'Sussex squall' will blow itself out by the time the series ends and Harry's upcoming memoir is published in January Prince Harry describes life in the Royal Family as a 'dirty game' in his new Netflix trailer Meghan is seen looking worried as the Sussexes' lawyer, Jenny Afia, tells the camera: 'There was a war against Meghan to support other people's agendas' The teaser opens with a scene of Harry and Meghan in a car, seemingly in America, as the duke says: 'It's really hard to look back on it now and go ''what on earth happened?'' As videos play of the couple announcing their engagement and their wedding in 2018, a news clip voiceover by Piers Morgan says: 'She's becoming a royal rock star' Finally, Harry appears in a selfie video as he says, 'No one knows the full truth - we know the full truth' and the trailer ends It contained footage of Princess Diana, Meghan and the new Princess of Wales all surrounded by photographers, as Harry spoke of ‘the pain and suffering of women marrying into this institution’. Strip them of their titles, say 98% of you JUST 2 per cent of the public think Harry and Meghan should keep their titles, a Mail+ poll has found. A staggering 98 per cent believe the couple should lose their titles as Duke and Duchess of Sussex, which were bestowed upon them by the late Queen in 2018. Last night more than 42,000 readers had voted in the poll, but royal experts have suggested that scrapping the couple’s titles could prove a constitutional problem, because Harry is a prince by birth. Visit mailplus.co.uk Advertisement He appeared to reference the death of his mother as he added: ‘I was terrified. I didn’t want history to repeat itself.’ But the accuracy of the Netflix series was immediately called into question as it emerged that footage which supposedly showed media harassment of the couple was actually filmed under vastly different circumstances. Footage of cameramen included in the trailer was actually filmed as former glamour model Katie Price arrived for a drink-driving court appearance, while a photograph showing banks of waiting photographers was taken at a Harry Potter premiere with no royal attendance. In the trailer, footage shows photographers swarming around a car, as Meghan says: ‘I realised they [the Royal Household] are never gonna protect you.’ The trailer then cuts to an image of Meghan wiping her eyes, apparently in tears. But the car footage was filmed outside the home of Donald Trump’s former lawyer Michael Cohen, as he left to start a prison sentence in 2019. Another photograph showed Harry and Meghan walking away with their baby son Archie while a cameraman appeared to loom over them from a hidden vantage point. Journalist Robert Jobson said it was taken when the couple met Archbishop Desmond Tutu in Cape Town, and that Harry and Meghan had agreed where three accredited photographers and journalists could stand. He said it was a ‘complete travesty’ to use the photograph as an example of intrusion. Journalist and pundit Piers Morgan, whose voice from a news report was used in the trailer, said: ‘These two wouldn’t know the truth if it slapped them round their latte-encrusted tiaras.’ NETFLIX: Another photograph that was used in the first Harry and Meghan's Netflix trailer released earlier this week REALITY: But rather than showing photographers fighting for space to snap Harry and Meghan, the image is actually from a Harry Pottery premiere It cuts to Meghan saying 'and then' before snapping her fingers with Harry adding: 'Everything changed'