By Rich Lowry
Friday, September 27, 2024
If this is what the Secret Service has
become, it’s a wonder that something worse than Butler, Pa., hasn’t already
happened.
That event was terrible enough, with one rally-goer
killed and Donald Trump coming within an inch of losing his life.
If Trump hadn’t turned his head at the right moment,
Butler would have become one of the most notorious locations in American
history, and we’d be living in a different world.
At the time, the Secret Service’s failure seemed
unfathomable, and none of the revelations since — set out in a report by the
Senate Homeland Security Committee — make it any better.
Barney Fife was better organized and more accountable.
The Secret Service is given responsibility for avoiding a
calamity that would traumatize the nation and derange its politics for years,
perhaps decades, to come. Its competence is a matter of the utmost national
consequence. Yet, the agency was bumbling and slow-reacting, a disaster waiting
to happen.
Surely, this sort of ineptitude wouldn’t be tolerated by
Taylor Swift’s security detail.
The Secret Service, which we expect to be run with a
vigor and precision befitting its mission, instead operates as though it’s a
typical bureaucratic outfit housed within, say, the Health Resources and
Services Administration.
The Senate report relates “multiple foreseeable and
preventable planning and operational failures,” as an armed man was permitted
to climb atop the roof of the American Glass Research building within 200 yards
of where Trump was speaking and get off eight shots.
The story of how it happened is muddled by
finger-pointing and confusion over who was in charge.
Secret Service advance agents didn’t know who was
responsible for final decisions and didn’t know who determined the security
perimeter for the event. State and local law enforcement were responsible for
the AGR building because it was outside the perimeter. But advance agents
didn’t share planning documents with them and didn’t ask for the operational
plans of state and local law enforcement. Someone from Butler emergency
services warned during a walkthrough that local law enforcement didn’t have the
manpower to lock down the building.
Advance agents did suggest putting large trucks or other
heavy equipment between the stage and buildings to block lines of sight, but
nothing came of the idea.
The local officers and Secret Service agents operated on
separate radio channels, and the only communications connection between the
Secret Service and police communication centers was via cellphone. Some agents’
radios had technical problems or didn’t work, while the counter-unmanned-aerial
system was inoperative at the time Crooks flew a drone over the rally site in
the afternoon.
Crooks fired his shots at 6:11 p.m. At 5:44 p.m., the
Secret Service security room got word that local police had spotted a
suspicious person with a range finder near the AGR building. This should have
been a five-alarm event, yet key Secret Service personnel weren’t told that
local police had observed Crooks and then lost track of him.
Three minutes before Crooks fired, a local
law-enforcement officer sent a radio alert that someone was on the AGR roof,
with the Secret Service security room getting word a minute after that.
When a Secret Service counter sniper saw local police
running with their guns drawn toward the AGR building, it didn’t occur to him
to tell Trump’s detail to get him off the stage. He said the police running
meant only an “elevated” threat level.
The explanation of one top Secret Service officer — “I
can’t put out fires that I don’t know exist” — should never be acceptable.
It could have been worse, but that’s not the standard.
Given the contents of the Senate report, it’s not
shocking that the Secret Service allowed another would-be assassin to get close
to Trump just two months later.
An agency that should fade into the background because
the quality of its work can always be taken for granted is instead a national
embarrassment.
No comments:
Post a Comment