I really meant to read a less stressful book after the last one. In fact, on a friend’s recommendation, I requested Homer’s Odyssey. Going to the library just to pick up one book is challenging for me. As I walk in, there are displays of books everywhere. I found four more I wanted and one of them was Courage Under Fire by Steven A. Sund.
What happened on January 6, 2021, is
forever etched in my mind, just as are other traumatic dates. It was my husband’s
birthday, and we were enjoying watching TV when suddenly the show was
interrupted by coverage of the insurrection at the Capitol building. We watched
with growing horror all afternoon and into the evening, wondering WHERE was the
National Guard and why didn’t they show up until after the traitors departed?
Last August, I read Representative Jamie Raskin’s book Unthinkable and
experienced what it was like for the legislators, staff, and family members
inside who were protected and safely evacuated by Capitol police.
Steven A. Sund was the Capitol Police
chief that day. I wanted to read his book because I still had so many questions
about what happened that day and wanted the viewpoint of the man in
charge. One of the first things I
learned is how complicated security is within the Capitol. I would have thought
that Sund would be in control of implementing all the plans and would have the authority
to call in all the help he needed. But, no. In order to request the National
Guard, he would have to get permission from the two sergeants at arms (one for
the House, one for the Senate). And THEY have to go talk to their people
(Speaker, Senate Majority Leader).
Based on reports Sund was getting from
Intel across all the federal police sources, there was only a “remote” chance
of violence because all six protest groups were supposed to stay in place.
However, when they began advancing on the Capitol and becoming increasingly
menacing and violent as they began fighting with the Capitol police guarding
the outside perimeters, Sund called the sergeants at arms. The House Sergeant
didn’t like “the optics” of having soldiers at the Capitol, but he’d go ask
Speaker Pelosi and get back to Sund. The Senate Sergeant suggested that Sund
call the Guard and see what they might have available.
The protest turned into a full scale
coup attempt. No one got back to Sund about calling in the National Guard, and
so he began calling other agencies with a police force: Supreme Court, FBI,
Secret Service, and nearby police forces from Virginia and Maryland. Even New
Jersey sent troopers to help at the Capitol, which was rapidly overrun by the
insurrectionists. Sund was in a near
panic, watching his police force being attacked with all kinds of weapons and
noxious sprays.
At about the time Capitol police
within the building began escorting legislators, staff and family members to
safety, Sund finally got permission to call in the National Guard. But they
didn’t come. There were some units within sight of the Capitol, directing
traffic, but they were not permitted to deploy to help the struggling officers.
Why? And this was my biggest question:
why wasn’t the National Guard deployed earlier?
Sund explained how the Army was giving
him the runaround about deploying soldiers to the Capitol even though the general
Sund spoke to could see how dangerous the insurrectionists had become. Sund does give a reason why the response was
so horribly delayed, and it’ll raise the goosebumps in you as it did to me. You’ll have to read the book to find out why and
other hairy details unknown at the time to us viewers.
This is the scariest part: there was a
massive intel communication failure before January 6th. Over two
years have gone by and not much has changed. Analysts and other intel agents haven’t
been replaced; the procedures haven’t been changed. Steven Sund and the two
sergeants at arms were both forced to resign before being fired. They were the
sacrificial lambs and the world went on.
It could happen again. Without any
changes, it will.
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