Order Given: Task Force Dawn Sky Deploys

In the Situation Room Admiral Fitzwallace grimly outlines a high-risk Delta Force extraction—Comanches and a Blackhawk insert 20 men to secure a perimeter while a six-man snatch team takes the hostages. He matter-of-factly describes the CIA ‘wet team’—"because it's bloody"—and times the window: 47 minutes from the President's order, two hours to finish. Bartlet’s short, heavy decision—"Go"—shifts the administration from containment to kinetic action. The quiet that follows and officers mobilizing make the moment an irreversible turning point with moral and political consequences.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

4

Fitzwallace briefs Bartlet and Leo on the rescue operation’s planned execution, detailing the use of Comanches, a Blackhawk, and a covert sniper team.

professional focus to heightened tension ['Situation Room']

Bartlet questions the necessity of the CIA 'wet team,' prompting Fitzwallace to explain the term—revealing the mission's deadly nature.

curiosity to grim realization

Bartlet issues the decisive order—'Go'—authorizing the high-risk rescue mission, triggering immediate operational execution by the military team.

deliberation to resolve

Military officers confirm the execution order, signaling the launch of the mission with urgent professionalism.

anxious readiness to decisive action

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

2

Grim professionalism — outwardly controlled and businesslike while acknowledging moral hazard; steady under pressure.

Admiral Fitzwallace stands in the Situation Room and delivers a terse operational briefing: assets, force composition, timeline, and a blunt description of the CIA wet team's role. He answers tactical questions and repeats 'Go' after the President, facilitating execution.

Goals in this moment
  • Convey a clear, executable plan to the President and staff.
  • Secure presidential authorization to launch the rescue within the required timeline.
  • Ensure operational security (emphasize radio silence and timing).
Active beliefs
  • Speed and precision are essential to rescuing the hostages.
  • Lethal, deniable options (the wet team) are sometimes necessary to succeed.
  • Chain-of-command clarity and quick authorization will improve the odds of success.
Character traits
clinical disciplined blunt operationally focused
Follow Percy Fitzwallace's journey

Heavy and resolute — the surface calm of command covers the recognition of potential blood and political cost.

President Bartlet listens, poses a moral/terminological question about the 'wet team,' then issues the one-word order 'Go.' He remains silent afterward as staff immediately mobilize, absorbing the weight of the decision.

Goals in this moment
  • Authorize a mission to rescue American servicemen.
  • Balance moral scrutiny with the urgency of action.
  • Maintain control of the presidency's use-of-force decision.
Active beliefs
  • The President must be fully informed before sanctioning lethal operations.
  • There are moments when action, even bloody action, is required to fulfill the government's duty.
  • A measured, informed 'Go' is necessary to legitimize risk to personnel.
Character traits
decisive morally reflective commanding solemn
Follow Josiah Bartlet's journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

4
Task Force Dawn Sky Radios

Radios are invoked by Fitzwallace when he orders 'radio silence' for the 47-minute transit; they function narratively to emphasize operational security and the tension between communication and secrecy.

Before: Assigned to Task Force operators and under operational …
After: Placed on mandated silence for transit; reserved for …
Before: Assigned to Task Force operators and under operational control protocols.
After: Placed on mandated silence for transit; reserved for approved secure traffic during the operation.
Elite Snipers' Loaded Rifles

Heavy sniper rifles are referenced as part of the assault team's equipment for subduing sentries and providing overwatch — their mention signals lethal readiness and force escalation in the plan.

Before: Catalogued in the equipment list and briefed as …
After: Committed to field use as part of the …
Before: Catalogued in the equipment list and briefed as available to the assault force.
After: Committed to field use as part of the perimeter/overwatch package upon operation commencement.
Two Comanche Helicopters

The two Comanche helicopters are described as the air assets that will insert assault elements and support rapid, low-profile penetration to secure the objective's perimeter; they are central to timing and tactical surprise.

Before: Assigned and planned as primary insertion assets, briefed …
After: Authorized for operation; part of Task Force Dawn …
Before: Assigned and planned as primary insertion assets, briefed in the Situation Room.
After: Authorized for operation; part of Task Force Dawn Sky's launch plan (committed to execute within the 47-minute window).
Delta Force Insertion Blackhawk

The Blackhawk is specified as the heavier insertion platform accompanying Comanches to insert the 20-man perimeter force, anchoring the assault's emplacement and enabling the snatch team's entry.

Before: Allocated to the assault package and discussed in …
After: Confirmed as part of the operation and authorized …
Before: Allocated to the assault package and discussed in the briefing.
After: Confirmed as part of the operation and authorized to launch after the presidential 'Go.'

Organizations Involved

Institutional presence and influence

5
Task Force Dawn Sky

Task Force Dawn Sky is the consolidated assault organization authorized by the President's order; it is the vehicle through which the White House converts strategy into a field operation to recover hostages.

Representation Represented via Fitzwallace's briefing and the officers' confirmations that 'Dawn Sky's in operation.'
Power Dynamics Operates under military command authority but requires civilian (presidential) authorization; executes orders given by the …
Impact Its activation demonstrates the administration's readiness to use direct military force, reinforcing executive reach and …
Internal Dynamics Tightly hierarchical with clear command roles; internal pressure exists to perform rapidly and with secrecy.
Extract the three captured Marines alive if possible. Minimize exposure and collateral casualties while completing the mission within the timeline. Direct operational capability and specialized assets (helicopters, snatch teams). Reliance on military chain-of-command and secure communications to implement orders.
CIA Wet Team

The CIA wet team is invoked as a covert lethal element attached to the assault — its mention underscores that the operation anticipates close-quarters, bloody engagement requiring deniable, lethal expertise.

Representation Manifested by Fitzwallace's blunt explanation and the President's clarifying question; represented as an attached capability …
Power Dynamics Operates in the shadows of military action; exerts forceful, deniable influence but remains subordinated to …
Impact Its involvement signals the blending of CIA covert action with overt military force, raising questions …
Internal Dynamics Operates with compartmentalized authorization and tight secrecy; potential friction with conventional military rules of engagement.
Neutralize stubborn or inaccessible hostile combatants to enable hostage recovery. Provide lethal, precision-focused capability that regular forces may not execute as cleanly. Covert operational tactics and specialized personnel. Institutional knowledge and deniability enabling politically sensitive actions.
20-Man Perimeter Force

The 20-man perimeter force is described as the insertion element that will forcibly secure the barracks perimeter, enabling the snatch team to operate — functionally crucial to isolating the objective and protecting extraction routes.

Representation Presented in Fitzwallace's spoken asset list; implicitly embodied by the Blackhawk and Comanche insertion plan.
Power Dynamics Tactical executor of the operation's protective layer; subordinate to joint command but decisive in battlefield …
Impact Serves as the mechanistic means by which policy is enforced on the ground, translating command …
Internal Dynamics Operates under strict timing and coordination requirements; relies on precise synchronization with aerial and snatch …
Establish and hold a secure perimeter around the target. Suppress external resistance to permit the snatch team's ingress and egress. Firepower and manpower projection via helicopter insertion. Coordination with snatch team and overwatch elements to control the ground.
Six-Man Snatch Team

The Six-Man Snatch Team is the mission's core seizure element tasked with penetrating the objective and physically removing the hostages; its presence raises the stakes of close-quarters, high-risk engagement.

Representation Mentioned in the briefing as the specialized unit that will 'penetrate and take the captives.'
Power Dynamics A small but highly empowered unit operating under mission command; success or failure will determine …
Impact Represents the human face of state force projection — its success will bolster institutional legitimacy, …
Internal Dynamics Operates under intense pressure with narrow margins for error; tightly controlled chain of command during …
Locate and extract the hostages swiftly and with minimal harm. Exfiltrate the captives and return them to the perimeter force for extraction. Specialized training and speed of action. Reliance on precise intelligence and coordinated insertion to achieve surprise.
CRF Guards

CRF Guards are the hostile sentries and visible guards that the assault must subdue; they function as the immediate antagonists whose presence shapes force composition and the decision to include lethal elements.

Representation Referenced in Fitzwallace's briefing as the enemy force that will be engaged and subdued by …
Power Dynamics Local, on-the-ground opposition that the U.S. assault force must overpower; they hold tactical control of …
Impact Their presence necessitates an escalated U.S. response and justifies use of force; they are the …
Internal Dynamics Likely varied in training and capability; organized enough to warrant coordinated suppression but not central …
Maintain control of the barracks and prevent hostage escape or rescue. Resist the assault to protect the captors' position and leverage. Physical control of terrain and use of visible sentries. Potential use of force and local knowledge to complicate rescue efforts.

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What led here 3
Causal

"The briefing on the Marines' location leads directly to Bartlet's authorization of the rescue mission."

Closed Briefing — The Delta Force Decision
S4E17 · Red Haven's On Fire
Causal

"The briefing on the Marines' location leads directly to Bartlet's authorization of the rescue mission."

Private Briefing — The Rescue Decision and Its Cost
S4E17 · Red Haven's On Fire
Causal

"The briefing on the Marines' location leads directly to Bartlet's authorization of the rescue mission."

Authorize Delta Extraction — 'We Got to Go Get Them'
S4E17 · Red Haven's On Fire
What this causes 2
Causal

"The go-ahead for the rescue mission leads to the retaliatory bombing at Red Haven."

Rescue Confirmed — Red Haven Burns
S4E17 · Red Haven's On Fire
Causal

"The go-ahead for the rescue mission leads to the retaliatory bombing at Red Haven."

From Rescue Relief to Red Haven Carnage
S4E17 · Red Haven's On Fire

Key Dialogue

"FITZWALLACE: "They fly in on two Comanches and a Blackhawk. 20 men forcibly secure the perimeter of the barracks. A snatch force of 6 men penetrate and take the captives.""
"FITZWALLACE: "No, sir, it's called... They call it a wet team because it's bloody.""
"BARTLET: "Go.""