Narrative Web
Object

14,000 Dollars U.S. Bounty

A declared monetary reward — fourteen thousand U.S. dollars — publicly offered by the Iraqi government as a bounty for any American plane shot down or soldier captured. Not a photographed prop but an announced incentive that functions like an operational order: characters cite it aloud, register alarm, and treat it as a hard political lever raising the risk and urgency of rescue decisions.
2 appearances

Purpose

A financial incentive intended to encourage Iraqi forces or allied actors to capture or shoot down American airmen or soldiers by offering a cash reward.

Significance

Serves as a concrete escalation indicator that personalizes and politicizes the crisis. Bartlet invokes the bounty to justify urgent, forceful action and to frame rescue as morally imperative; it converts a tactical downed-pilot incident into a broader casus‑belli and heightens interdepartmental tension.

Appearances in the Narrative

When this object appears and how it's used

2 moments