By Lawrence Henry on 5.30.02 @ 12:44AM
A special review of Christopher Whitcomb's Cold Zero: Inside the FBI Hostage Rescue Team.
With the FBI in the media crosshairs recently, Christopher
Whitcomb's memoir, Cold Zero: Inside the FBI's Hostage Rescue
Team (Little, Brown, 448 pages, $25.95; click
here to order) may be read for information alone about the
agency's history during a critical period. Whitcomb was there
throughout the nineties, and present at the infamous encounters at
Ruby Ridge and Waco. Indeed, he watched those screwups through the
sights of a sniper rifle. Information alone, however, doesn't begin
to represent the value of this book. It's a rattling great story
written by a real-life Tom Clancy hero.
If Whitcomb does not question policy at the political level,
even with big targets like Bill Clinton and Janet Reno looming over
the action, it must be remembered that Whitcomb is a company man.
The manuscript was vetted by the Bureau. Perhaps that's why
Cold Zero has not been reviewed in the conservative press
the way it might have been. That's too bad. It's one of the best
accounts ever of patriotic ambition and military training. The
chapters on Whitcomb's experience at the Marine sniper school are
incomparable. (The first shooting test, with .22s, has the recruits
firing at fanned decks of cards, picking out poker hands. Whitcomb
confidently punches himself a straight flush.) And his account of
breaking in as a callow young Special Agent in rural Springfield,
Missouri, is deadpan hilarious.
Christopher Whitcomb grew up in rural New Hampshire, living the
outdoor life. He skied, he hunted, he played daredevil games on
railroad trestles with his friends. He stands a lean six-four, and
he's obviously as tough as a combat boot. He worked for the late
Massachusetts Republican Congressman Silvio Conte, and in that
capacity got to attend Ronald Reagan's 1986 State of the Union
address.
Awestruck, Whitcomb writes of that experience, "I knew then, as
if by epiphany, that what I wanted to do with my life was to help
protect it all…I wanted to make a difference in society, to
wake up in the morning with a cause. Justice. I wanted
jurisdiction."
This inspiration inevitably bangs straight up against the
realities of the day-to-day business of law enforcement, against
the incorrigibility of numskull criminals, and against the
notorious revolving doors of the justice system. Frustrated with
the life of a line agent, Whitcomb tries out for the toughest unit
in the Bureau, the Hostage Rescue Team, a challenge on a par with
the Navy Seals or the Army's Delta unit.
But here things begin to go wrong, at first subtly, then
dramatically. Waco and Ruby Ridge, of course, have become
ideological touchstones for government abuse of power. At least at
the start, Whitcomb simply does not buy that:
"We were not some Zionist Occupational Government, coming in to
strip all Americans of their constitutional right to bear arms,"
Whitcomb writes, describing himself standing in Randy Weaver's
gravel driveway. "Why anyone would assume I wanted to march in and
take away their guns and their rights to do anything absolutely
baffled me. I grew up in the same woods with the same guns reading
the same Bible all these guys did…No one told me I could walk
away from a valid arrest warrant because I didn't consider myself
legally bound by federal law. Nobody ever told me I could stop
paying taxes because I don't like abortion…or that I could
shoot law officers when they came to do the same job they perform a
thousand times a day…"
By the time Whitcomb finds himself standing in another gravel
plot, watching fire consume David Koresh's Mount Carmel, his
thoughts have turned to utter despair: "I see my shadow dancing in
the coals. I hear the voice of evil. It's me."
What happened?
It is all too easy for agencies -- even for whole branches -- of
the government to forget what they are supposed to do. Since the
start of the war on terrorism, many people have reminded us that
the military's job is to break things and kill bad guys. But we
need to remember something else, too. The job of a law enforcement
agency is to gather, analyze, and preserve evidence in support of
criminal prosecution. Since the late 1960s, when John Ehrlichman
put together the Law Enforcement Assistance Administration, the
militarization of police forces has metastasized at an ever
quickening pace. Under Bill Clinton, even park rangers and agents
of the Environmental Protection Agency started carrying guns.
All too often today, law enforcement agencies break things and
kill -- and not always bad guys. Of course police do confront
lawbreakers and make arrests, but the mission remains the same:
gather evidence in support of criminal prosecution. Sometimes that
evidence is a person, a witness or a perpetrator. But the job is
not destruction. It is the relentless tilling of society's fields
in support of the cultivation of law.
Maybe the FBI started to get lost with the fall of the Soviet
Union, since so much of its original evidence-gathering charter
involved Communist subversion in the U.S. (a now-established fact
to all but those who are not ignorant, or worse). Maybe the FBI,
like many law enforcement agencies, fell under the siren sway of
SWAT and high technology.
America's warriors, like Chris Whitcomb, are defined first and
best by their loyalty, to their unit, to their service, and to
their country. Whitcomb simply cannot understand -- and cannot
countenance -- betrayal. That is both his finest quality and his
most pronounced weakness.
In that, he stands clearly for the FBI as a whole. In the curve
of his career, Christopher Whitcomb was transcendentally inspired,
rigorously trained, overarmed, then slowly and systematically
betrayed and undermined by twitchy management and panicky
politics.
After that, he moved into the Bureau's upper echelons and became
a bureaucrat.
topics:
Taxes, Bill Clinton, Business, Abortion, Environment, Constitution, Law, Military