WHITE
HOUSE SITUATION ROOM
The Situation Room is an amazing
5,525-square-foot conference room and intelligence center in the basement of
the West Wing of the White House. It is run by the National Security Council
staff for the use of the president of the United States and his advisors
(including the national security advisor, the homeland security advisor and the
White House chief of staff) when a national security crisis arises at home and
abroad.
There are live, secure communications with
outside (often overseas) persons when meetings are held. The room also is
equipped with secure, advanced communications equipment for the president to
maintain command and control of U.S. forces around the world.
The Situation Room staff is organized
around five watch teams that monitor domestic and international events. Each
watch team includes three duty officers, a communications assistant, and an
intelligence analyst. The teams are staffed from a pool of approximately 30
senior personnel from various agencies in the intelligence community and
from the military. All are handpicked, seasoned professionals chosen from their
respective agencies. They remain strictly apolitical and stand watch on a 24-hour
basis, constantly monitoring world events and keeping senior White House staff
apprised of significant incidents.
A typical day in the Situation Room begins
with the watch team's preparation of the Morning Book. Prepared for the
president, vice president, and most senior White House staff, the Morning Book
contains a copy of the National Intelligence Daily, the State Department's
Morning Summary, and diplomatic cables and intelligence reports. The Morning
Book is usually in the car when the national security advisor is picked up for
work. The morning routine also includes the PDB, or President’s Daily Brief, which
is prepared by the ODNI, Office of the Director of National Intelligence, and hand-delivered,
and briefed by an intelligence community officer to the president and
other NSC principals.
A neat scene unfolds in the Situation Room in the MISSION OF VENGEANCE spy thriller where CIA spymaster Corey Pearson discusses an escalating situation with Russia in the Caribbean, one that could lead to many American tourists dying. Here’s a few snippets from that scene:
Maggie opened a lead-lined cabinet beside her desk. “You know the routine.”
General Morrison placed his secure phone
inside. Maggie locked it up and said, “The president is waiting for you.”
A guard opened the door. Morrison walked
into the soundproof Situation Room, the same room that President Obama and his
national security team sat in years before, watching the actual raid on Osama
bin Laden’s compound through a videocam attached to a SEAL Team 6 soldier.
President Rhinehart sat at the far end of
the conference table next to Maxwell Gordon, Secretary of the new DCIOC,
Domestic Counter-Intelligence Operations Center. They were pouring over an
intelligence report that Morrison sent them.
“Yes, and I’m troubled by the Spetsnaz
forces our Russian double agent Yury Bocharov refers to. I thought they were
disbanded when the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991?”
“They remained intact, went underground
and festered. Putin has rejuvenated the Cold War and the KGB’s Spetsnaz, but it
now works alongside their foreign intelligence agency, the GRU.”
Gordon said, “The CIA estimates that the
GRU commands over 25,000 Spetsnaz operatives around the globe. They actively
recruit Russian citizens in foreign countries who are still loyal to their
mother Russia. We’re watching one in Turkey. A CIA operative in Ankara reported
that a Russian businessman he recruited was approached by a Spetsnaz agent,
wanting to use his home as a safe house.”
Rhinehart pushed a few buttons next to him
and one of five flat-screen televisions on the wall flickered, then CIA spymaster
Corey’s encrypted visual image and voice appeared.
“Yes, sir. Mr. President.”
“Agent Pearson, I’ll be blunt. I want every
member of the Spetsnaz team that killed the American family taken out. Do you
understand me?!”
“I do. There were six altogether. We
captured one, but he didn’t survive the EIT. His name was Alexei Suvorov.”
“Where are the others? I do not want them
to get out of the Dominican Republic alive.”
“They’re staying on a luxury yacht that we
have under surveillance.”
Rhinehart folded his arms and massaged his
chin as he slowly turned and walked back to his chair and sat down. He looked
over at General Morrison. “Bill, I’m activating the USS Caribbean Sea
amphibious assault ship. It will sail out of Norfolk tonight and begin training
exercises off the coast of the Dominican Republic. I want you to contact CBIF’s
special ops commander and have him and two squads board while it’s in route.
Morrison said, “That would be one-hundred
troops.”
“Exactly. I want the entire contingent,
including their Blackhawk assault and Apache attack helicopters onboard. If any
more U.S. citizens are killed, Spetsnaz will quickly have real warriors in their faces… America will go to war.”
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Lastly, here's a video about America's Book of Secrets- The White House: Inside the Situation Room:
Robert Morton is a member of the Association Of Former Intelligence Officers (AFIO) and writes about the U.S. Intelligence Community. He also enjoys traveling to the Caribbean, Bahamas, and Florida Keys. Both passions are combined in his Corey Pearson- CIA Spymaster spy thriller series.
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