Leo Leverages Treaty Ratification to Isolate Adamley, Met with Defiant Refusal
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Leo paces toward his chair, leveraging the ratified treaty threshold as a strategic play while emphasizing the consequences of being left out.
Adamley counters Leo's diplomatic pressure with flat refusal, signaling an entrenched ideological standoff.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Determined command masking strategic urgency
Leo purposefully walks to his chair, sits with deliberate poise, and deploys precise treaty data—139 signed, 35 ratified, 60-ratification threshold—as a rhetorical hammer to corner Adamley, framing U.S. opt-out as catastrophic isolation in global affairs.
- • Compel Adamley to reconsider military opposition by highlighting treaty inevitability
- • Position U.S. participation as essential diplomatic leadership
- • Global treaties demand U.S. involvement to maintain moral and strategic primacy
- • Exclusion risks irreparable damage to America's international standing
Defiant resolve, armored against persuasion
Already seated on the sofa, General Adamley responds to Leo's pressure with a single, unyielding word—'Absolutely'—delivering curt refusal that shuts down negotiation and embodies military defiance without further explanation.
- • Reject White House entreaties to preserve military autonomy
- • Signal unbreakable opposition to tribunal entanglement
- • International tribunals threaten core U.S. sovereignty and military prerogative
- • Participation invites Pentagon revolt and congressional backlash
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Adamley's initial concerns about the War Crimes Tribunal escalate into a flat refusal, highlighting the entrenched ideological standoff."
"Adamley's quote of the contentious draft speech sets up Leo's later strategic play about the ratified treaty threshold."
Themes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Part of Larger Arcs
Key Dialogue
"LEO: "139 countries have signed. 35 have ratified. Once 60 ratify, that's the ball game. You want to be left out?""
"ADAMLEY: "Absolutely""