Fitzwallace's Hague Warning

Admiral Fitzwallace quietly informs Leo that the U.S. military has actively covered its tracks in the Qumar missing‑plane investigation — ELTs dismantled, wreckage scattered, SEALs involved — and warns that incontrovertible proof of U.S. culpability would expose the President to war‑crimes prosecution at The Hague. Leo brusquely downplays the immediate legal peril and deflects Fitzwallace's suggestion to revisit the administration's stance on an international tribunal. The exchange crystallizes the story's international and legal stakes, planting a menacing threat that will force urgent decisions and drive the President's return to Washington.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

3

Fitzwallace updates Leo on the Qumar investigation, assuring him that the U.S. has covered its tracks regarding the missing plane.

curiosity to reassurance ["Leo's office"]

Fitzwallace starkly warns Leo that if U.S. culpability in the plane's disappearance is proven, the President could face war crimes charges at the Hague.

reassurance to tension ["Leo's office"]

Leo dismissively responds to Fitzwallace's warning, asserting that the President won't attend the Hague, and the conversation ends with a light-hearted exchange.

tension to relief ["Leo's office"]

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

6
Mark
primary

Mildly curious and slightly concerned; pragmatic about optics but not alarmed by the national-security briefing that follows.

Margaret enters, announces Fitzwallace's arrival, relays the curious report about women in aprons at Mrs. Bartlet's Madison event, then leaves the principals to their briefing—functioning as information conduit and tonal counterpoint.

Goals in this moment
  • Keep Leo informed of campaign optics and schedule.
  • Provide concise, actionable snippets of information for senior staff.
  • Remain out of classified conversation while ensuring senior staff are aware of peripheral PR issues.
Active beliefs
  • Small visual details (rolling pins) can become big media stories.
  • Leo needs immediate, succinct updates to manage multiple crises.
  • Her role is to filter and pass along facts, not to advise on substance.
Character traits
efficient observant detail-oriented politically aware
Follow Mark's journey

Gravely professional; calm delivery masks seriousness—urgent but steady, insisting on clarity rather than panic.

Admiral Fitzwallace enters, closes the door, delivers a blunt operational briefing detailing how U.S. forces concealed the Qumar crash, names units involved, and issues a grave legal warning about The Hague's potential reach.

Goals in this moment
  • Convey the operational facts and legal risks frankly to Leo.
  • Ensure Washington understands the severity and permanence of the concealment.
  • Prompt reconsideration of policy toward international tribunals to reduce legal vulnerability.
Active beliefs
  • Operational secrecy was necessary and effective, but it creates legal exposure.
  • If incontrovertible evidence surfaces, international institutions will pursue accountability.
  • The chain of command and White House must be prepared for political/legal fallout.
Character traits
direct matter-of-fact steadfast unflinchingly candid
Follow Percy Fitzwallace's journey

Not on-scene; implied precariousness and political vulnerability.

Referenced repeatedly as the individual whose exposure would produce the gravest legal consequence—target of Fitzwallace's warning but not present; his fate frames the stakes of the briefing.

Goals in this moment
  • Remain politically secure and avoid legal exposure (inferred).
  • Finish campaign events and manage optics while being responsive to crises (inferred).
Active beliefs
  • The Presidency carries exceptional responsibilities and sensitivities (inferred).
  • He and his team will resist foreign judicial reach (inferred).
Character traits
vulnerable (by implication) political lightning rod symbolic of executive accountability
Follow Josiah Bartlet's journey

Not present in Leo's office; their presence elicits bemusement and PR concern among staff.

Referenced by Margaret as the anomalous attendees at Mrs. Bartlet's Madison event—women in aprons with rolling pins supply a comic yet potentially viral PR distraction juxtaposed against the country's grave crisis.

Goals in this moment
  • Draw attention to a local grievance or message (inferred).
  • Create visual media that can influence public perception (inferred).
Active beliefs
  • Symbolic protest can influence optics more than policy (inferred).
  • Local theater matters in national campaigns (inferred).
Character traits
theatrical provocative visually striking
Follow Women in …'s journey

Controlled on the surface; defensively wry with an undercurrent of strategic concern—uses gallows humor to manage alarm.

Leo sits at his desk, receives Fitzwallace, asks perfunctory questions, deflects the legal threat with sardonic dismissal, and arranges to 'stay in touch' while clearly minimizing the political risk.

Goals in this moment
  • Contain immediate panic and prevent institutional escalation.
  • Protect the President politically and legally from immediate jeopardy.
  • Keep classified operational details compartmentalized and off the record.
Active beliefs
  • Public admission of U.S. culpability would be catastrophic politically.
  • Pragmatic containment is preferable to public legal reckoning.
  • The administration should resist international tribunals that could target a sitting president.
Character traits
measured deflective wry protective of the President
Follow Leo McGarry's journey

Not an active person; serves as a rhetorical device that signals Leo's wry skeptical tone.

Toscanini is invoked by Leo as an offhand cultural analogy to downplay mythic fears (the Bermuda Triangle), functioning rhetorically rather than literally in the meeting.

Goals in this moment
  • Provide a cultural image to frame improbability (as used by Leo).
  • Diffuse tension through analogy (as used by Leo).
Active beliefs
  • Analogies can humanize complex threats (inferred).
  • Cultural references can minimize perceived danger (inferred).
Character traits
metaphorical cultural shorthand
Follow Arturo Toscanini's journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

5
Protest Aprons (Madison Event)

Protest aprons (with rolling pins) are cited by Margaret as a visual oddity from Mrs. Bartlet's Madison stop; narratively they serve as a tonal counterpoint—domestic theater beside clandestine international maneuvering—and as a potential PR irritation.

Before: Worn by roughly twenty women at the Madison …
After: Remain a campaign optics issue; passed along to …
Before: Worn by roughly twenty women at the Madison event, visible to attendees and potentially press.
After: Remain a campaign optics issue; passed along to Leo as an anecdote but not acted on within the briefing.
Qumar Plane's ELT

The Qumar plane's ELT (Emergency Locator Transmitter) is described as deliberately dismantled by U.S. forces to eliminate an electronic trail; Fitzwallace names it as a key piece of evidence that was neutralized to conceal culpability.

Before: Functioning as a standard ELT on the crashed …
After: Disabled/dismantled and removed from evidence chain; cited as …
Before: Functioning as a standard ELT on the crashed aircraft, located on the downed jet prior to U.S. intervention.
After: Disabled/dismantled and removed from evidence chain; cited as nonfunctional and not available to investigators.
Navy Avenger Bombers

Navy Avenger bombers are invoked by Fitzwallace as part of historical context—roughly five were among about 200 craft referenced—underscoring the scale of disappearances and the plausibility of extensive, confusing debris fields used as cover.

Before: Part of historical loss statistics or referenced as …
After: Referenced as contextual evidence supporting the cover story …
Before: Part of historical loss statistics or referenced as assets tied to Atlantic disappearances.
After: Referenced as contextual evidence supporting the cover story of mass, indistinguishable wreckage in the Bermuda Triangle.
Qumar Incident Rescue Plane

The rescue plane is named as the craft that entered the area after the jet; its involvement frames the operational response and helps explain how U.S. forces established control of the debris field to effect a cover-up.

Before: Deployed as a legitimate rescue asset in the …
After: Functionally part of the operation used to consolidate …
Before: Deployed as a legitimate rescue asset in the immediate aftermath of the incident.
After: Functionally part of the operation used to consolidate wreckage and establish the official SAR narrative while U.S. teams removed incriminating evidence.
Danny Concannon's Proof Linking U.S. to Shareef's Plane

The downed Qumar plane is the central object of the cover-up: Fitzwallace explains it was broken into 27 pieces and deliberately intermingled with other wreckage to make identification and attribution impossible.

Before: Crashed at sea or in hostile terrain, a …
After: Deliberately fragmented, scattered among other wrecks, and effectively …
Before: Crashed at sea or in hostile terrain, a discrete wreck that could have been investigated.
After: Deliberately fragmented, scattered among other wrecks, and effectively concealed from standard recovery and forensic processes.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

6
Madison, Wisconsin

Madison, Wisconsin is the site of Mrs. Bartlet's campaign event where the women in aprons appeared; it functions as a domestic political counterpoint and a reminder of the administration's simultaneous public-facing obligations.

Atmosphere Lightly chaotic at the campaign level; local quirks threaten to become national optics issues.
Function Campaign event location referenced to illustrate competing demands on the administration.
Symbolism Embodies the collision of small-scale political theater with large-scale national crises.
Campaign crowd setting Visual motif: aprons and rolling pins creating memorable imagery
Qumar

Qumar is the nation at the center of the missing‑plane incident; its status as the origin of the downed aircraft creates the diplomatic context for the U.S. response and the risk of international exposure.

Atmosphere Politically fraught and volatile—an external pressure point demanding Washington's attention.
Function Foreign locus of the incident that triggers military action and diplomatic risk.
Symbolism Embodies the geopolitical entanglement that turns a military operation into a legal liability.
Source of diplomatic communications to Washington Setting for international search and rescue activity
The Hague

The Hague is invoked as the forum that could prosecute war crimes if incontrovertible proof of U.S. concealment emerged; it functions as the legal and moral threat that reframes the operational briefing as a constitutional and diplomatic problem.

Atmosphere Ominous, juridical—an external accountability mechanism looming over domestic decision-making.
Function Judicial antagonist: potential site of prosecution and reputational damage.
Symbolism Represents international law and the moral consequences of covert military action.
Invoked as courtroom and tribunal imagery Carries weight of international legal procedure and reputational risk
Mrs. Bartlet's Madison Event

Mrs. Bartlet's Madison Event (specific locus within Madison) is the concrete place Margaret references; its mention contrasts mundane campaign disruptions with the briefing's grave military revelations.

Atmosphere Public-facing, performative—susceptible to optics and media framing.
Function Source of peripheral PR issue raised during the national-security exchange.
Symbolism A stage for domestic political theater adjacent to concealed international action.
Crowds, campaign signage, press coverage Striking visual detail: women in aprons holding rolling pins
Bermuda Triangle

The Bermuda Triangle is invoked as the official cover story and geographic explanation for the plane's disappearance; Fitzwallace uses it rhetorically to explain why physical evidence could plausibly be missing.

Atmosphere Invoked as eerie and inscrutable—an atmospheric shorthand for disappearance and plausible deniability.
Function Narrative cover: a naturalized explanation to mask deliberate concealment.
Symbolism Symbolizes institutional obfuscation disguised as natural mystery.
Conjures storms, currents, and confusing wreckage fields Evokes historical tales of vanished ships and planes
Limestone Cliffs

Limestone cliffs are named as one of the deliberate concealment sites where wreckage was buried—geography used tactically to hide evidence from investigators and satellites alike.

Atmosphere Grim, methodical—terrain described coldly as a storage place for incriminating debris.
Function Physical concealment location for dispersed wreckage.
Symbolism Represents how natural geography can be weaponized to erase accountability.
Jagged, difficult-to-search terrain Provides plausible obstacles to recovery and forensic work

Organizations Involved

Institutional presence and influence

6
SEALs

SEALs are named as the tactical units who dismantled ELTs and handled sensitive recovery and concealment tasks—portrayed as precise, professional actors in a morally ambiguous mission.

Representation Referenced via Fitzwallace's recounting of who executed the concealment.
Power Dynamics Operationally powerful at the tactical level; act under military orders but create legal exposure for …
Impact Illustrates how elite units can insulate state actions from scrutiny, raising questions about accountability between …
Internal Dynamics Not detailed on-screen, but implies tight operational control and strict compartmentalization.
Perform high-risk recovery and concealment tasks with professional competence. Execute orders that prioritize national-security priorities over evidentiary transparency. Specialized skills and secrecy Operational autonomy in the field Reputation for effectiveness enabling trust from civilian leaders
U.S. Navy

The U.S. Navy is described as the institutional operator of assets and personnel that executed and coordinated the concealment: providing aircraft, SEALs, and logistical support to sanitize the crash site.

Representation Through Admiral Fitzwallace's briefing and operational detail about assets and units used.
Power Dynamics Exerting operational control; exercises de facto authority over tactical decisions while answerable to civilian leadership.
Impact Highlights tension between military operational imperatives and civilian political/legal exposure; showcases military ability to shape …
Internal Dynamics Chain-of-command execution with possible friction between operational necessity and legal/political risk (implied).
Protect U.S. personnel and operations from international scrutiny. Manage and control the physical scene to prevent evidence from creating diplomatic crises. Deployment of specialized personnel and aircraft Operational secrecy and compartmentalization Institutional reputation and chain-of-command authority
United Kingdom

The United Kingdom is mentioned as a legitimate SAR partner in the official cover story; its participation provides plausible deniability and allied cooperation in the public narrative.

Representation Framed as a cooperating partner through Fitzwallace's mention of a 'legitimate SAR with the UK.'
Power Dynamics Portrayed as cooperative and helpful; its involvement helps legitimize the official account while U.S. forces …
Impact Shows how alliance relationships can be leveraged to construct public narratives that obscure unilateral covert …
Internal Dynamics Potential tension between transparent allied SAR operations and secret unilateral activities (implied).
Conduct search-and-rescue operations credibly with allied partners. Support allied humanitarian and diplomatic imperatives while managing political optics. Diplomatic cover/partnership in official statements Operational resources and presence in the theater International legitimacy that helps mask unilateral actions
International Criminal Court (ICC)

The International Criminal Court (The Hague) is invoked as the juridical institution that could summon the President if incontrovertible evidence of a war‑crimes cover-up emerged; it provides the legal horizon that makes the military revelation politically existential.

Representation Represented as a prospective prosecutorial body referenced in Fitzwallace's warning.
Power Dynamics Situated as an external check on national power; potentially disempowering for the Presidency if international …
Impact Functions as the external moral-legal constraint that reframes covert military action as potentially criminal, forcing …
Internal Dynamics Not engaged directly on-screen; functions as a looming institutional adversary rather than an active participant.
Uphold international legal standards and pursue accountability for war crimes (theoretical). Act on admissible evidence to seek judicial redress for international crimes (theoretical). International legal authority and prosecutorial mandate Normative pressure on nations through treaty obligations and global consensus Reputational leverage that can compel political consequences even without direct prosecution
Special Ops

Special Ops are cited alongside SEALs as the other tactical force used to dismantle evidence and scatter wreckage—reinforcing the professionalism and deliberateness of the concealment operation.

Representation Mentioned in Fitzwallace's list of units that executed the cover-up.
Power Dynamics Function as expert executors of politically sensitive operations; operationally potent, politically exposing.
Impact Demonstrates institutional capacity to shape facts; raises accountability concerns between covert action and public law.
Internal Dynamics Strict confidentiality and compartmental hierarchies in mission execution (implied).
Complete mission objectives with minimum traceability. Support broader military strategy by removing incriminating evidence. Operational resources and expertise Logistical reach and fieldcraft Ability to operate under classification and deniability
UK and Royal Qumari Guard

The UK and Royal Qumari Guard are cited as part of the official, legitimate SAR effort—named to bolster the public account and to contrast the clandestine actions taken by U.S. special forces.

Representation Presented in Fitzwallace's account as on-the-ground partners providing plausible cover for the overall response.
Power Dynamics Function as cooperative actors who lend legitimacy; their official actions reduce immediate suspicion while the …
Impact Reveals how allied cooperation can be instrumentalized to hide unilateral concealment; raises questions about transparency …
Internal Dynamics Implied alignment in public operations with potential asymmetry in clandestine tasks performed by U.S. units.
Conduct credible SAR operations in partnership with international actors. Maintain diplomatic collaboration while managing the optics of the incident. On-scene presence and joint statements Local authority that supports a cohesive narrative Operational coordination with allied militaries

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What this causes 2
Escalation

"Fitzwallace's warning about potential war crimes charges for the President escalates the Qumar investigation's stakes, prompting Bartlet's immediate return to Washington."

Bartlet Downplays Market Jolt — Qumar Reopens, Campaign Cut Short
S4E1 · 20 Hours in America Part …
Escalation

"Fitzwallace's warning about potential war crimes charges for the President escalates the Qumar investigation's stakes, prompting Bartlet's immediate return to Washington."

Qumar Investigation Reopened — Bartlet Cuts Campaign Short
S4E1 · 20 Hours in America Part …

Key Dialogue

"FITZWALLACE: "The tracks are covered.""
"FITZWALLACE: "We dismantled the ELT, left the plane in 27 pieces, scattered among other wrecks, buried in underwater landslides and limestone cliffs.""
"FITZWALLACE: "Perhaps this would be a good time for you to reconsider your position on a international war crimes tribunal.""