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- <text id=94TT1591>
- <title>
- Nov. 14, 1994: The Presidency:Never Safe Enough
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Nov. 14, 1994 How Could She Do It?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE PRESIDENCY, Page 66
- Never Safe Enough
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Hugh Sidey
- </p>
- <p> Never before in its 194 years had the White House, the world's
- most recognizable symbol of democracy, been sprayed by bullets.
- The British invaders torched the building in 1814, but there
- was no gunplay there, since the unprepared Americans wisely
- chose to run away. Abraham Lincoln stood at his bedroom window
- and listened to Civil War cannonading across the Potomac, but
- the Confederates never reached the White House.
- </p>
- <p> The two fanatic Puerto Rican nationalists who tried to assassinate
- Harry Truman in 1950 attacked him when he was living across
- the street in Blair House while the White House was being renovated.
- One was killed on the sidewalk. A White House policeman also
- died.
- </p>
- <p> But never was the stately facade of the White House nicked by
- slugs fired in anger until Oct. 29, when the brooding Colorado
- Springs upholsterer Francisco Martin Duran, 26, pulled a Chinese-made
- SKS semiautomatic assault weapon from under his coat and shot
- 27 rounds of ammunition in short bursts across the north side
- of the building. Five bullets pocked the mansion's 4-ft.-thick
- sandstone wall, and three shattered a window and chipped the
- stone of the press-briefing room near the West Wing. Several
- bullets burrowed into trees. President Clinton, who was inside
- the White House watching a football game, was probably the safest
- person in the area, given the bulletproof glass and scores of
- Secret Service officers between him and the gunman.
- </p>
- <p> U.S. prosecutors were considering charging Duran with attempted
- assassination, based on notes and other material found in his
- nearby pickup truck and threatening remarks he allegedly made
- to a co-worker at Colorado Springs' Broadmoor hotel. And the
- old question of how to assure a President's safety rose again.
- </p>
- <p> Treasury Secretary Lloyd Bentsen, who has jurisdiction over
- the Secret Service, announced that a review of the shooting
- spree and White House security procedures would be incorporated
- into a study already under way. It follows September's safety
- scare in which a light plane crash-landed on the White House
- grounds and slid into the wall below the President's bedroom,
- killing only the depressed pilot. Meanwhile, the National Park
- Service, which maintains the grounds and building, is working
- on a long-range plan for White House preservation, tourism and
- work space. The White House is the world's power stage, and
- a new set is needed.
- </p>
- <p> In the aftermath of the shooting, Richard Griffin, the Secret
- Service agent in charge of presidential security, raised anew
- the idea of closing off that portion of Pennsylvania Avenue
- that runs in front of the White House in order to give agents
- easier control of sightseers. Protests came from all quarters,
- including Bill Clinton, who said, "I just don't think in a free
- society you can have the President of the country kind of hiding
- in the sand and just wall him off in the White House."
- </p>
- <p> True enough. Being busily at work on the premises--and visible--is an ingredient of leadership. In fact, the Park Service
- has a contingency plan for disaster, natural and otherwise,
- that would rush in work crews and get the White House functioning
- again as soon as possible so the President could be seen by
- the public to be back on duty in the old familiar place. "There
- is no symbol as powerful," says a planner.
- </p>
- <p> Actually, there was a proposal made back in Lyndon Johnson's
- time to run Pennsylvania Avenue and E Street, which is behind
- the White House, in tunnels and return to Pierre L'Enfant's
- original layout for the capital city, in which an expansive
- President's Park included what is now Lafayette Square, the
- 18 acres for the White House and the ellipse behind, with no
- commercial throughways. "That would work a lot better than what
- we have now," insists White House historian William Seale. "Tourists
- could be more easily controlled, and yet they would get a sense
- of being closer by being in a park setting."
- </p>
- <p> During the cold war, when security agents used to play war games
- involving terrorist threats to the White House, the one unsolvable
- problem was a commercial airliner loaded with explosives working
- its way into the landing pattern at Washington National Airport,
- then veering off for a suicide plunge into the White House.
- The only answer was to shut down the airport, which Congress
- refused to consider, since its proximity and reserved parking
- spaces are prized legislative perks.
- </p>
- <p> Security is undoubtedly complicated by the myriad political
- jurisdictions. The District of Columbia police control Pennsylvania
- Avenue. The Park Service is in charge of the sidewalks. The
- Secret Service runs security inside the fence and White House.
- For certain last week there were more agents disguised in T
- shirts and leather jackets roaming through White House environs.
- Years back the Park Service used to have four separate beats
- for their uniformed police around the White House. The system
- melted away at times to one beat for a man on a motor scooter.
- The service is thinking about going back to more visible officers
- within eye contact of one another and trained to spot suspicious
- loiterers.
- </p>
- <p> Presidential security started as an informal procedure but has
- grown into its own bureaucracy. George Washington rarely went
- riding without an armed friend trotting beside him. James Monroe
- stationed sharpshooters on the White House roof during big receptions.
- Franklin Pierce was the first President to have a regular guard.
- Lincoln continued the practice with Allan Pinkerton. The Secret
- Service, originally created to combat counterfeiting, officially
- took over in 1906 to protect Theodore Roosevelt.
- </p>
- <p> Complaints over the years about security problems and cramped
- working quarters have produced a raft of alternate ideas for
- the White House. There were proposals in the last century to
- build a new White House in Washington's spacious Rock Creek
- Park. Just last week talk-show hosts heard concerned Americans
- suggest that the White House should be turned into a ceremonial
- museum and the President and his family moved out of the city
- to someplace like Camp David. Various crises have produced dozens
- of suggestions for altering the building and its routines. During
- World War II it was recommended that parts of the roof be covered
- with sandbags and fitted with machine guns. But the suggestion
- that the White House be painted in Air Corps camouflage was
- mercifully laughed down by F.D.R. In 1991, during the Persian
- Gulf War, the information about a possible terrorist attack
- on the White House was so real that White House tours for the
- public were quietly suspended for a week, and the building was
- doubly secured.
- </p>
- <p> The actual cost of protecting the President is a secret, creating
- some grumbling on Capitol Hill and elsewhere. "Too damn many
- Secret Service," says a White House aide, believing the agency
- may have passed the threshold of true security and now complicates
- its own operations. The entire Secret Service has a budget of
- $461 million and employs 4,600 people worldwide, but what portion
- goes to presidential protection is not known. What is known
- is that a Secret Service request for more money is almost never
- turned down by Congress and that a certain institutional arrogance
- infects the agency. "They are good but not as good as they think
- they are," says a former security man, who also believes agents
- are too eager to abridge civil freedoms.
- </p>
- <p> That all this discussion is necessary brings a nostalgic sadness,
- particularly to those who can remember what it was like around
- the White House before Dec. 7, 1941. The grounds were open then.
- Kids scuffed through barefooted on their way to get ice-cream
- cones. Elmer Staats, former Comptroller General, recalled his
- days at the Brookings Institution, then located on Lafayette
- Square. "The fence was 3 ft. high and kept out only dogs. The
- policemen around smiled at everybody. The students at Brookings
- used to walk up to the front door and leave their calling cards
- in hopes Eleanor Roosevelt would invite them over for a reception,
- which she often did." There is an old story, which author Kevin
- Phillips picked up in his new book about Washington, Arrogant
- Capital. It is about a young man driving his convertible past
- the White House in the 1930s when it starts to rain. He turns
- into the drive, goes up under the Portico, puts his top up and
- rolls back out on the avenue.
- </p>
- <p> One of the first things done at the White House on that fateful
- day of Pearl Harbor when the old, comfortable world came crashing
- down was to move the security boundary from the doors of the
- White House to the iron fence at the edge of the property. It
- has been there ever since, and it may have to be moved out again.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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