Narrative Web

Pericles One Launched — Lockdown, Optics, and a Staff Fraying

President Bartlet's retaliatory strike, code-named Pericles One, has been launched and Leo immediately imposes a strict operational lockdown: no calls, no press, and a tightly controlled presidential address at night. The moment compresses operational execution, media management, and interpersonal pressure — Toby buries himself in briefing memos and reflexively refuses Josh's offer of help to keep secrecy and control; Josh presses a racial/optics worry about hiring a young black aide; Admiral Fitzwallace steadies Leo, reframing leadership and the burden of setting the President down. This sequence is a turning point from debate to decisive action and exposes the staff's moral and political tensions under crisis.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

2

Leo confirms the military operation Pericles One is underway, targeting four military locations, and instructs the team to prepare for a presidential address without any leaks.

urgency to resolve

Toby and Josh exchange brief words amid the chaos, with Toby dismissing Josh's offer for help as he focuses on the bombing operation.

frantic to dismissive

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

8

Grimly controlled — outwardly authoritative while internally carrying the weight of an irreversible executive action and the duty to 'set the President down.'

As Chief of Staff, Leo announces the Pericles One timing, imposes an operational lockdown (no calls, no press), schedules briefings and the President's address, moderates C.J.'s requests, and courts counsel from Fitzwallace while handling Josh's hiring concern.

Goals in this moment
  • Enforce information discipline and operational secrecy around the strike.
  • Prepare and protect the President for the televised address.
  • Minimize media disruption and prevent premature leaks.
  • Keep staff focused on roles rather than spectacle.
Active beliefs
  • Operational secrecy and chain-of-command discipline are essential to mission success.
  • Media optics must be subordinated to national security imperatives.
  • The President will need careful guidance to perform effectively under strain.
Character traits
decisive procedural protective of institutional order weary but authoritative
Follow Leo Thomas …'s journey
Ted
primary

Alert and ready — prepared to follow orders and help with speech preparation.

Sam appears briefly, present for instructions about the President's appearance and the briefing schedule; he accepts Leo's orders and exits to execute assigned tasks.

Goals in this moment
  • Assist in preparing the President's address.
  • Carry out Leo's scheduling and briefing instructions.
  • Support communications and factual accuracy.
Active beliefs
  • Clear delegation speeds crisis response.
  • He must be responsive and available for immediate tasks.
  • Teamwork mitigates the weight of executive responsibility.
Character traits
cooperative attentive professional
Follow Ted's journey
C.J. Cregg
primary

Controlled anxiety — she is professionally alert about press consequences and eager to manage access and messaging tightly.

C.J. presses for access to the President (requests minutes) and is told emphatically by Leo that she will be present; she is tasked implicitly with holding the line until the high sign and managing press readiness.

Goals in this moment
  • Be available to coach and manage the President during the address.
  • Prevent premature or unauthorized press engagement.
  • Ensure the administration speaks with clarity and authority.
Active beliefs
  • Timing and coordination with the press are crucial for message control.
  • Direct access to the President at critical moments matters for shaping public perception.
  • She must defend institutional discipline even under pressure.
Character traits
protective media-savvy persistent disciplined
Follow C.J. Cregg's journey

Calm, pragmatic, and quietly insistent — comfortable delivering blunt truth and redirecting attention to consequential battles rather than cosmetic concerns.

Admiral Fitzwallace arrives, moves into the intimate counsel role: he briefly summarizes the stakes, advises Leo on how to 'set the President down' for the public address, and rebuts Leo's and Josh's racial-optics anxiety with a personal, disarming anecdote.

Goals in this moment
  • Reassure and steady Leo so the President can perform under pressure.
  • Refocus leadership on substantive duties rather than superficial anxieties.
  • Signal that military counsel supports measured civilian decision-making.
Active beliefs
  • Presidents don't get new friends quickly; experience settles them into the role.
  • There are real, worthy fights to pick — less important symbolic worries shouldn't distract from the mission.
  • Respect and fair treatment at work trump performative concerns about optics.
Character traits
steadying wry pragmatic moral clarity
Follow Percy Fitzwallace's journey

Tight, near-panicked composure — panic channeled into work and language, masking private alarm with brittle professionalism.

Toby arrives overloaded with briefing papers, withdraws into technical work — insisting he doesn't need help and snapping at Josh — indicating he chooses procedural focus over emotional support as a coping strategy.

Goals in this moment
  • Prepare accurate briefing material and narrow talking points for the President's address.
  • Preserve operational secrecy and prevent uncontrolled leaks.
  • Control the narrative through precise messaging rather than sloppy collaboration.
Active beliefs
  • Information control and message discipline are essential to avoid operational and political catastrophe.
  • The press and premature involvement will compromise mission integrity.
  • He must shoulder the burden of words because sloppy language can have moral and political consequences.
Character traits
single-minded tense defensive meticulous
Follow Toby Ziegler's journey

Calmly competent — functioning as steady administrative ballast amid heightened staff tension.

Margaret performs her backstage role: she announces the Admiral's arrival and executes Leo's instruction to send him in, quietly facilitating the operational tempo and logistics of the meeting.

Goals in this moment
  • Ensure key people enter and exit on schedule.
  • Maintain operational order in Leo's office.
  • Prevent procedural missteps that could escalate confusion.
Active beliefs
  • Small, exact administrative acts sustain larger institutional functions.
  • Discretion and punctuality matter most in crises.
  • Her role is to facilitate, not to be seen.
Character traits
efficient discreet reliable
Follow Margaret Hooper's journey

Restless and conflicted — wants to do right by the kid and be seen as competent, while internalizing anxiety about how the administration will look under media scrutiny.

Josh oscillates between being a political operator and a nervous advocate: he presses Leo about hiring a promising young black aide, worries about the visual optics of the President's staff, offers to help Toby, and stands awkwardly in the room as decisions are announced.

Goals in this moment
  • Get the young man hired for the aide job.
  • Avoid a damaging visual/optics problem for the administration.
  • Find a way to contribute practically (offer help to Toby).
  • Protect the political standing of the staff in the eyes of the press.
Active beliefs
  • Visual optics matter politically and can undermine otherwise sound decisions.
  • Hiring should be merit-based, but politics and optics can trump merit in public perception.
  • Being seen as helpful or competent in crisis matters to his career and the administration.
Character traits
politically attuned protective anxious eager to be useful
Follow Joshua Lyman's journey
Sheila Evans

Sheila is referenced by Josh as someone he could rely on; later she is offered as a contact point while …

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

2
IHQ (Target)

The IHQ is explicitly enumerated by Leo as one of the four military targets of Pericles One; it functions rhetorically to legitimate the strike as focused on military command infrastructure rather than civilian centers, shaping staff and public framing.

Before: A plotted coordinate on planning maps and included …
After: Now part of the executed strike list; its …
Before: A plotted coordinate on planning maps and included in the strike package awaiting execution.
After: Now part of the executed strike list; its mention contributes to the administration's narrative that targets were military in nature while BDA remains pending.
Southian Bridge

The Southian Bridge is named by Leo as a planned strike target; its inclusion elevates the moral and political stakes by implying civilian infrastructure consequences and forces staff to confront optics and diplomatic fallout as they prepare messaging.

Before: Marked on strike slides and held as a …
After: Listed among the attacked coordinates; its naming tightens …
Before: Marked on strike slides and held as a selectable military objective during planning.
After: Listed among the attacked coordinates; its naming tightens the press and policy constraints the communications team must manage.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

5
Roosevelt Room (Mural Room — West Wing meeting room)

The Roosevelt Room operates as the operational bullpen where Toby, Ginger and other staffers gather to prepare the President's speech and monitor military updates — it is the practical engine-room translating orders into briefings and copy.

Atmosphere Chaotically busy, adrenaline-charged, with staff moving in and out under time pressure.
Function Operations workspace and staging area for drafting the address and receiving weapons briefings.
Symbolism Represents the thin connective tissue between operational decisions and public communication.
Access Effectively limited to staffers, communications and military briefers during the lockdown.
Staffers move frantically, papers and files under arm Ginger asks for BDA; Toby's arms are full of briefing materials
West Wing Corridor (Exterior Hallway Outside Leo McGarry's Office)

The West Wing Hallway serves as the transit and circulation space through which Fitzwallace exits with an officer and Toby passes by; it visually compresses the movement between private counsel and operational rooms.

Atmosphere Hushed movement with clipped cadence — a corridor of purposeful comings and goings.
Function Transit artery connecting the private command space and the operational Roosevelt Room.
Symbolism Physically manifests the shift from intimate counsel to public action.
Access Open to staff but movement is brisk and functionally limited to those on urgent business.
Polished floors reflecting strip lighting Footsteps clip, voices compress into urgent hushed exchanges
Leo McGarry's Office (Chief of Staff's Office)

Leo's Office is the command center where the Pericles One order is announced, where access is controlled and where Leo converts presidential outrage into operational discipline; it sets the moral and procedural tone for the entire response.

Atmosphere Tense, purposeful, quietly authoritative with clipped exchanges and suppressed emotion.
Function Command and coordination center for crisis decisions and staff direction.
Symbolism Embodies institutional steadiness and the heavy, private labor of leadership — the place where grief …
Access Practically restricted to senior staff and essential visitors; phone and press access suspended by Leo's …
Wood-paneled, close-set chairs concentrating voices into hushed urgency Coffee and briefing papers present, footsteps and doorways punctuate exchanges
Northern Rishan (Situation Room locus — S1E03)

Northern Rishan is named as the location of two munitions dumps targeted in Pericles One and functions as the distant geographic object of military action; it converts abstract policy into coordinates with human and diplomatic consequences.

Atmosphere Mentioned in briefing tone — remote, strategic, and cold as a map coordinate.
Function Targeted location for military strike.
Symbolism Represents the remote, sanitized geography of warfare that nonetheless produces concrete political costs.
Access Not physically accessible to the West Wing; domain of military planners.
Described as 'munitions dumps' on briefing slides Referenced in clipped, technical language by Leo
Southian Bridge

The Southian Bridge as a mapped location anchors the moral ambiguity of the strike by implying civilian infrastructure impact; its mention forces communications and policy teams to weigh collateral consequences in real time.

Atmosphere Evokes unease — a physical structure whose damage would be visible and politically salient.
Function Named strike objective that raises diplomatic and media stakes.
Symbolism Embodies the tension between military necessity and civilian harm in proportional retaliation.
Access A remote coordinate controlled by military planners; not a West Wing-accessible site.
Rendered on briefing maps as a decisive coordinate Carries the imagined sensory detail of metal, diesel and approach ramps

Narrative Connections

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Key Dialogue

"LEO: "The order was given at 16:27, codename Pericles One. Four targets, all military. Two munitions dumps in Northern Rishan, Southian bridge and an IHQ.""
"LEO: "Hey guys, no phone calls in or out. C.J., nothing to the press until you get the high sign from me. No head starts.""
"FITZWALLACE: "I'm an old black man and I wait on the President.""