Zero fail The rise and fall of the Secret Service

Carol Leonnig

Book - 2021

"Carol Leonnig has been covering the Secret Service for The Washington Post for most of the last decade, bringing to light the gaffes and scandals that plague the agency today--from a toxic work culture to outdated equipment and training to the deep resentment among the ranks with the agency's leadership. But the Secret Service wasn't always so troubled. The Secret Service was born in 1865, in the wake of the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, but its story begins in earnest in 1963, with the death of John F. Kennedy. Shocked into reform by their failure to protect the president on that fateful day, this once-sleepy agency was rapidly transformed into a proud, elite unit that would finally redeem themselves in 1981 by valiantl...y thwarting an assassination attempt against Ronald Reagan. But this reputation for courage and efficiency would not last forever. By Barack Obama's presidency, the Secret Service was becoming notorious for break-ins at the White House, an armed gunman firing at the building while agents stood by, a massive prostitution scandal in Cartagena, and many other dangerous lapses. To expose these shortcomings, Leonnig interviewed countless current and former agents who risked their careers to speak out about an agency that's broken and in desperate need of a reform"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : Random House [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Carol Leonnig (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xxii, 532 pages ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages [493]-519) and index.
ISBN
9780399589010
  • Author's Note
  • Prologue
  • 1. The Tragedy that Birthed a New Secret Service Kennedy to Nixon (1963-1974)
  • Chapter 1. Protecting Lancer
  • Chapter 2. Tempting the Devil
  • Chapter 3. Three Shots in Dallas
  • Chapter 4. No Time to Grieve
  • Chapter 5. One Last Day on the Trail
  • Chapter 6. The President's Spies
  • 2. Meeting the Test Ford to Clinton (1974-1999)
  • Chapter 7. A Casual Walk to Church
  • Chapter 8. Battening Down the Hatches
  • Chapter 9. Night of the Long Knives
  • Chapter 10. A Happy Service, A Rising Threat
  • Chapter 11. A Rock Star President
  • Chapter 12. The Intern
  • 3. Terror and Politics The Bush Years (2000-2007)
  • Chapter 13. Scrambling on 9/11
  • Chapter 14. "You Don't Belong Here"
  • Chapter 15. "He Predicted all of it"
  • 4. The Wheels come off The Obama Years (2008-2015)
  • Chapter 16. "He'll be Shot Sure as Hell"
  • Chapter 17. Sullivan's Crew
  • Chapter 18. The Night Bullets hit the White House
  • Chapter 19. "I Woke up to a Nightmare"
  • Chapter 20. Sullivan's Struggles
  • Chapter 21. Outed
  • Chapter 22. A New Sheriff in Town
  • Chapter 23. A Listing Ship
  • Chapter 24. "He's in the House"
  • 5. Sliding Backward The Trump Years (2016-2021)
  • Chapter 25. Clancy's Turn
  • Chapter 26. Chaos Candidate
  • Chapter 27. Taking A Hit For Trump
  • Epilogue
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Pulitzer Prize--winning Washington Post reporter Leonnig paints a damning portrait of a federal agency in crisis. The Secret Service was born after the failure of a bodyguard to protect Abraham Lincoln from an assassin's bullet. The agency's mission should be simple, but it has become mired in morale problems, malfeasance, and poor leadership. It has regularly "been ranked as the most hated place to work in the federal government," a fiefdom of clashing bosses who demand personal loyalty, in exchange for which they're willing to look the other way on certain matters. In a seamy example, while on duty in Cartagena, agents solicited prostitutes, some of whom were revealed to have cartel connections. The agency is necessary, as Leonnig easily demonstrates by citing statistics surrounding threats to Barack Obama, which earned him protection a full year ahead of his formal eligibility as a candidate. Yet, as the author writes, the Secret Service is shot through with unacknowledged racism--e.g., a noose hanging in a room used by a Black instructor was attributed to "one bad apple, not to the existence of a larger problem." Moreover, it is thoroughly politicized; MAGA hats were regularly seen on agents' desks during the Trump years, and some cheered on the Jan. 6 insurrectionaries. Leonnig charges that, against regulations, one agent became involved with Tiffany Trump. Meanwhile, the president himself "sometimes acted as if he were the head of personnel decisions at the Service," trying to have the leader of his wife's protective detail removed because he "was bothered by the chunky heels she wore on the job." In a supreme irony, he complained of overweight agents as well. While the presidential detail has since been purged, and the agency is not paying exorbitant rent to enrich the occupant of the White House, "the Service remains spread dangerously thin" and, it seems, scarcely able to perform its mission. A solid case for restructuring a neglected and neglectful agency whose job is too important to admit laxity. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Prologue On the evening of March 30, 1981, an eight-year-old boy in Norfolk, Virginia, sat glued to his family's living room TV. Earlier that day, John Hinckley, Jr., had attempted to assassinate Ronald Reagan outside the Washington Hilton. But as CBS News played the scene in a slow-motion loop, the boy's focus wasn't on the president. It was on the man who entered the frame. Over and over again, the boy watched in amazement as this square-jawed man in a light gray suit turned toward the gunfire and fell to the ground, clutching his stomach. By taking a bullet for the president, the newsman said, Tim McCarthy probably saved his life. At that moment, young Brad Gable (not his real name) knew exactly what he wanted to do when he grew up: He would be a Secret Service agent. Now, thirty years later, Gable had indeed fulfilled that mission. He was a member of the Secret Service's Counter Assault Team, or CAT. In the constellation of presidential protection, CAT arguably has the most dangerous assignment. When most people think of the Secret Service, they picture the suited agents who cover and evacuate the president in moments of danger. The heavily armed CAT force has a different mission: Run toward whatever gunfire or explosion threatens the president and neutralize it. The team's credo reflects the only two fates they believe await any attacker who crosses them: "Dead or Arrested." Gable was proud of the career he had chosen. Among his colleagues, he was respected for the pure patriotism driving him and for his intense focus on operational details. So why, in the late summer of 2012, as he sat in a restaurant near Fort Bragg, North Carolina, did he suddenly feel like throwing up? Gable and his fellow agents had come to a mom-and-pop restaurant with a group of Delta Force members who were overseeing the CAT team's annual training. Gable's squad had drilled for almost a week with these steely Special Forces operators, playing out mock assassination attempts and blind attacks to learn how to shield themselves and their buddies in close-quarters combat. After a dinner of ribs, steaks, and wings, Gable sat back for some beers and small talk with one of 9/11's faceless heroes, a Delta Force sergeant major I'll call John. Gable liked John's no-bullshit style. He had real battlefield experience--two weeks after the 9/11 attacks, he'd been part of the raid on Mullah Omar's Kandahar compound, but he didn't crow about it--which instantly earned Gable's trust and respect. On his second beer, Gable felt loose enough to ask John a question that had been on his mind: "After teaching so many operators and law enforcement agents, what do you think of the Secret Service's overall readiness?" The sergeant major demurred, so Gable pressed him. "Seriously, how would you rate us?" "Look," John said. "I feel sorry for you guys. The Service has really let you down. You'll never be able to stop a real attack." It wasn't the answer Gable had hoped for, and as he listened to John dissect the Service's outdated equipment and spotty training, his stomach grew queasy. Deep down, he knew how ill-equipped and out of date the Secret Service was, but hearing it articulated by someone he respected made it impossible to deny. His mind drifted to all the times he had seen the Service drop the ball--most recently, a 2010 trip to Mumbai with President Obama, in which his unit had narrowly avoided a major international incident after nearly killing an unidentified gunman who turned out to be a local police officer. Scenarios like these were dress rehearsals for a real attack on the president, and in his five years with CAT, he had seen the Service fail so many of them. Gable was now faced with a brutal truth: Increasingly, the Secret Service was fulfilling its Zero Fail mission based not on its skills, people, training, or technology, but on dumb luck. How long would it be before that luck ran out? Gable wasn't alone. He knew other dedicated agents who felt a growing sense of disillusionment, especially with the agency's leadership. But fear of repercussions had kept them silent. Until the stakes got too high. Excerpted from Zero Fail: The Rise and Fall of the Secret Service by Carol Leonnig All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.