Fabula
S3E21 · Posse Comitatus

Situation Room: Assassination Plan Briefing and Moral Reckoning

President Bartlet enters the Situation Room amid tension from Leo's prior clash with Fitzwallace. Military and intelligence officials brief him on legal constraints—presidential authority for covert actions but bans on political assassinations via Executive Order (one his own)—before unveiling the covert plan: Shareef's Gulfstream, piloted by a U.S. asset, will fake mechanical failure and land on a remote RAF strip in Bermuda for the kill. Bartlet probes feasibility, British involvement, and secrecy, expressing unease. Handed a pen-recorder disguised as a gift, his visceral discomfort foreshadows his agony, marking a turning point where ethical duress crystallizes into operational reality, propelling his arc toward reluctant authorization.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

5

Bartlet enters the Situation Room, greeted by military protocol, setting the stage for a high-stakes discussion.

formality to tension ['Situation Room']

A military official outlines the legal framework for covert actions, emphasizing the President's sole authority and the ban on political assassinations.

informational to confrontational ['Situation Room']

Leo argues that Executive Orders can be ignored by the Executive, hinting at the moral flexibility required for the proposed action.

legalistic to pragmatic ['Situation Room']

Fitzwallace details the Posse Comitatus Act's restrictions, forcing the operation offshore to Bermuda, where legal constraints don't apply.

constraint to strategic planning ['Situation Room']

Fitzwallace unveils the plan to intercept Shareef's Gulfstream mid-flight, forcing a landing in Bermuda for the assassination.

planning to operational detail ['RAF strip in Bermuda']

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

8

Heightened alertness under formal deference

Officer snaps room to attention with crisp 'Ten-hut!' as Bartlet enters, then sits with others, embodying rigid protocol that punctuates the shift from pre-brief tension to presidential command presence.

Goals in this moment
  • Enforce military decorum upon President's arrival
  • Signal readiness for high-stakes briefing
Active beliefs
  • Hierarchy demands immediate respect
  • Protocol steadies crisis atmosphere
Character traits
disciplined protocol-bound instantly responsive
Follow Another Officer's journey

Unaware prey in plotters' calculus

Shareef looms as referenced target—Oval meeting, Gulfstream flight, RAF landing—his 'gift' exchange priming recorder trap, embodying the human face of terror Bartlet recoils from putting voice to.

Goals in this moment
  • Attend diplomatic summit oblivious (inferred)
Active beliefs
  • Diplomatic veil shields terror operations
Character traits
ruthlessly untouchable (implied)
Follow Abdul Lebin …'s journey

Neutral operational focus

Aide responds to Man 3rd's nod by unzipping jacket, extracting pen-recorder, and handing it directly to Bartlet, who flinches and drops it, standing silently as President departs.

Goals in this moment
  • Deliver covert device seamlessly
  • Facilitate intel-gathering handover
Active beliefs
  • Small actions enable larger strategic wins
  • Chain of command ensures flawless execution
Character traits
efficiently dutiful unobtrusive precise
Follow Situation Room …'s journey

Steadfast resolve concealing tactical calculation

Fitzwallace positions beside computer display to detail Gulfstream sabotage—U.S. asset pilot faking failure for RAF Bermuda landing—rising with others on Bartlet's entry and exit, his measured delivery underscoring military precision amid President's probing.

Goals in this moment
  • Convince Bartlet of plan's feasibility and deniability
  • Highlight non-military execution to skirt legal barriers
Active beliefs
  • Shareef's elimination justifies extraordinary measures
  • Secrecy through minimal British involvement ensures success
Character traits
operationally ruthless strategically unflinching technically precise
Follow Percy Fitzwallace's journey

Visceral unease surging into repulsed resolve, masking deeper ethical torment

Bartlet enters abruptly, endures terse legal briefing on covert rules and assassination bans, probes plan logistics with sharp skepticism, receives and recoils from pen-recorder by dropping it disdainfully on table before demanding it be boxed and storming out, his body language radiating profound discomfort.

Goals in this moment
  • Grasp full operational and legal implications of assassination
  • Test feasibility and secrecy of the kill plan
Active beliefs
  • Executive Orders carry profound moral weight despite waivability
  • Killing demands ironclad justification beyond mere security
Character traits
intellectually incisive morally conflicted commandingly authoritative
Follow Abigail Bartlet's journey

Concerned vigilance tempered by dutiful pragmatism

Leo greets Bartlet warmly upon entry, sits amid briefing, interjects to strictly limit briefing exclusivity with 'This is as big as the club gets,' enforcing operational secrecy as tension from prior schedule clash lingers in his poised vigilance.

Goals in this moment
  • Safeguard briefing's compartmentalization
  • Support President's informed decision-making
Active beliefs
  • Absolute secrecy minimizes risks in covert ops
  • President must confront harsh realities head-on
Character traits
pragmatically steely loyal enforcer protective gatekeeper
Follow Leo McGarry's journey
Man 3rd
primary

Professionally composed amid ethical undercurrents

Man 3rd warns of Gang of Eight notification mandate post-order, questions gift exchange to propose pen-recorder, nods to aide for handover, rises on Bartlet's unease-fueled exit, threading legal oversight with tactical intel ploy.

Goals in this moment
  • Embed recording device via diplomatic gift
  • Ensure compliance with congressional oversight laws
Active beliefs
  • Intelligence edges outweigh moral qualms
  • Legal notifications are non-negotiable safeguards
Character traits
procedurally meticulous tactically opportunistic direct
Follow Man 3rd's journey
Supporting 1
Josh Lyman
secondary

Confirming Executive Order bans on political assassinations.

Goals in this moment
  • Clarify legal prohibitions
Follow Josh Lyman's journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

2
Shareef's Gulfstream

Shareef's Gulfstream features centrally in Fitzwallace's briefing—piloted by U.S. asset to fake failure en route to Bermuda RAF strip—its diplomatic fuselage recast as mobile kill chamber, forcing Bartlet to envision the mechanics of remote execution.

Before: Scheduled for Shareef's return flight, unmodified externally
After: Targeted for covert sabotage, pilot infiltrated
Before: Scheduled for Shareef's return flight, unmodified externally
After: Targeted for covert sabotage, pilot infiltrated
Situation Room Wall Computer Screen

Fitzwallace stations beside the humming computer screen displaying Gulfstream schematics—failure protocols, RAF coordinates—its glow illuminating the assassination blueprint as Bartlet leans in, transforming abstract kill calculus into visceral tactical reality that heightens his probing scrutiny.

Before: Active display in Situation Room, showing operational graphics
After: Still operational, briefing residue as room empties
Before: Active display in Situation Room, showing operational graphics
After: Still operational, briefing residue as room empties

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

1
RAF Strip in Bermuda

Remote RAF Bermuda strip—'road in the grass'—pivots as kill site in Fitzwallace's plan, its isolation (only three aware) enabling Gulfstream ambush; Bartlet interrogates British complicity, underscoring alliance strains in covert op's geography.

Atmosphere Evoked as deceptively tranquil yet lethally isolated
Function Designated execution ground for forced landing
Symbolism Foreign soil masking U.S. moral abdication
Access Minimal personnel knowledge fortifies secrecy
Grass-scarred runway Remote, humid isolation

Organizations Involved

Institutional presence and influence

5
Gang of Eight

Gang of Eight invoked by Man 3rd as mandatory post-order notify—bipartisan leaders/intel chairs—amplifying legal duress on Bartlet, transforming solo executive call into congressionally shadowed burden.

Representation Via procedural warning in briefing
Power Dynamics Oversight check constraining presidential autonomy
Impact Highlights checks on executive war powers
Enforce notification transparency Mitigate covert action risks Statutory mandates Bipartisan leverage
Royal Air Force

RAF's remote Bermuda strip unwittingly hosts kill zone—three personnel only aware—queried by Bartlet on complicity, its 'grass road' enabling secrecy but straining U.S.-UK bonds in plot's machinery.

Representation Through unwitting infrastructure reference
Power Dynamics Passive enabler exploited by U.S. ops
Impact Tests limits of partner sovereignty
Maintain strip operations oblivious Provide isolated landing (inferred) Geographic asset Alliance ignorance
Bartlet Administration (Executive Office of the President)

White House frames the covert crucible—Oval meeting site for Shareef gift, Situation Room as decision forge—its schedule preservation (per prior tension) priming the trap, embodying executive isolation in terror calculus.

Representation As hosting venue and operational hub
Power Dynamics Central authority coordinating military input
Impact Crystallizes Oval's moral battleground
Internal Dynamics Leo-Fitzwallace friction over risks
Secure presidential buy-in Compartmentalize lethal intel Venue control Staff enforcement
Joint Chiefs of Staff

Joint Chiefs sit entrenched with Leo and intel personnel, rising in unison for Bartlet, bolstering Fitzwallace's briefing on non-military kill via Gulfstream, their presence lending warfighting gravity to legal and tactical disclosures that pressure presidential choice.

Representation Collective physical attendance of generals/admirals
Power Dynamics Advisory authority yielding to presidential command
Impact Reinforces military-executive fusion in crisis
Validate operational feasibility Navigate Posse Comitatus constraints Expert testimony Institutional protocol
Pentagon

Pentagon's scheduling rigidity—preserving Shareef's White House visit—echoes in briefing subtext, enabling paranoia-free Gulfstream trap; referenced as operational architect, its calculus defended implicitly through Fitzwallace.

Representation Via Fitzwallace as high-level conduit
Power Dynamics Strategic enabler pressuring executive action
Impact Exposes hypocrisy in terror-response chains
Maintain target complacency Execute deniable kill Schedule manipulation Asset infiltration

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What this causes 4
Callback

"The pen recorder Bartlet drops in discomfort is later retrieved as evidence after Shareef's assassination."

Shareef Assassinated: Silent Confirmation Seals Bartlet's Fate
S3E21 · Posse Comitatus
Callback

"The pen recorder Bartlet drops in discomfort is later retrieved as evidence after Shareef's assassination."

Pen Recorder Retrieved: Assassination Confirmed
S3E21 · Posse Comitatus
Callback

"The pen recorder Bartlet drops in discomfort is later retrieved as evidence after Shareef's assassination."

Shareef's Assassination Confirmed; Bartlet's Isolated Revelation
S3E21 · Posse Comitatus
Character Continuity

"Bartlet's initial discomfort with Fitzwallace's assassination plan contrasts with his eventual decision to authorize it, showcasing his moral conflict."

Bartlet's Moral Capitulation: Authorizes Shareef Assassination
S3E21 · Posse Comitatus

Key Dialogue

"BARTLET: "Doesn't the law also require that I not assassinate someone?" MAN 2ND: "Yes. Political assassination is banned by Executive Order. Two Executive Orders, as a matter of fact." BARTLET: "I know. One of them was mine.""
"FITZWALLACE: "He's flying back tonight in his gulfstream. The pilot will be one of our people. They'll experience a mechanical failure about 90 minutes into the flight and set down in a remote RAF strip in Bermuda. It's really not much more than a road in the grass.""
"BARTLET: "What does the pen do? Squirts poison?" MAN 3RD: "It's got a small recording device in there. He'll probably throw it in the trash, but you never know. You might get lucky. He sticks it in his pocket on the flight home.""