Strike Today — Bartlet's Fury and the Missing Glasses

President Bartlet erupts outside the Oval, accusing military advisors Cashman and Berryhill of stonewalling after the downing of an American airliner and demanding a response be drafted and executed the same day. Leo pushes back, insisting on procedural caution and warning Bartlet not to personalize the loss by saying 'him' in front of the Joint Chiefs. The scene ends with Bartlet’s furious insistence colliding with Mrs. Landingham’s domestic calm — he can’t find his glasses — a humanizing detail that undercuts and complicates the appearance of steady command. The beat escalates tension, forces accelerated operational planning, and reveals both personal grief and political vulnerability.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

6

Bartlet vents frustration over the delayed response to the attack, accusing Cashman and Berryhill of dragging their feet.

frustration to anger

Leo reminds Bartlet of the procedural constraints, but Bartlet insists on immediate action, demanding a response scenario be drawn up today.

resolve to insistence

Bartlet's frustration escalates as he vents about the 72-hour delay since the attack, declaring they will strike back today.

impatience to urgency

Leo cautions Bartlet to avoid personalizing the attack when speaking with the Chiefs, but Bartlet questions why he shouldn't take it personally.

caution to defiance

Bartlet dismisses Leo's concern about personalizing the victim, emphasizing it's about Americans, not just one individual.

defensiveness to resolve

Leo concedes the argument, indicating a strategic retreat as Bartlet prepares for his next meeting.

tension to acquiescence

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

4

Professionally neutral and welcoming

Positioned in the Outer Oval Office, Nancy offers a brief, polite morning greeting to the entering President and Leo, facilitating smooth transition into the inner Oval.

Goals in this moment
  • Greet and acknowledge President's arrival
  • Support seamless office flow
Active beliefs
  • Polite protocol eases high-stress entries
  • Small courtesies sustain daily operations
Character traits
Courteous Efficient Subtle
Follow Nancy — …'s journey

Boiling fury laced with personal grief and defensive resolve

Striding angrily toward the Oval Office with Leo, Bartlet vocally accuses Cashman and Berryhill of sabotage-like delays, demands same-day response planning and strikes inside at his desk, yells repeatedly for missing glasses, snaps defensively about personalizing Morris Tolliver's death, and squints at his watch before holding a file.

Goals in this moment
  • Force immediate drafting and execution of military retaliation
  • Reassert unchallenged presidential authority over advisors
Active beliefs
  • Military advisors are intentionally stonewalling to undermine him
  • Personal connection to victim justifies accelerated, aggressive action
Character traits
Impatient Authoritative Emotionally volatile Defensive
Follow Josiah Edward …'s journey

Steadfast calm veiling urgent concern for protocol and optics

Walking alongside Bartlet outside and into the Oval Office, Leo methodically explains interagency process with State and Chiefs, firmly warns against using 'him' for Morris Tolliver in front of military leaders, absorbs Bartlet's defensiveness without escalating, and quietly exits for staff meeting.

Goals in this moment
  • Temper Bartlet's personalization to preserve command credibility
  • Insist on deliberate process amid crisis pressure
Active beliefs
  • Procedural caution prevents political and operational disaster
  • Public depersonalization strengthens executive position with military
Character traits
Procedural Loyal Restrained Protective
Follow Leo Thomas …'s journey

Serene composure anchoring routine amid chaos

Already stationed in the Oval Office, Mrs. Landingham greets Bartlet warmly, hands him a paper, efficiently agrees to search for his glasses twice amid his outbursts, and calmly reminds him the director awaits before exiting again.

Goals in this moment
  • Resolve President's immediate practical need for glasses
  • Maintain schedule by prompting next appointment
Active beliefs
  • Domestic steadiness supports executive function
  • Routine tasks persist regardless of crisis intensity
Character traits
Efficient Maternal Unflappable Professional
Follow Mrs. Landingham's journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

3
President Josiah 'Jed' Bartlet's Metal-Rim Reading Glasses

The President's metal‑rim reading glasses are explicitly missing and become a recurring, domestic prop: Bartlet calls for Mrs. Landingham to find them, the absence interrupts his ability to read a file and undercuts the display of seamless command, humanizing him in front of staff.

Before: In unknown location (off his face); not found …
After: Still missing at scene's end; Mrs. Landingham departs …
Before: In unknown location (off his face); not found when Bartlet searches.
After: Still missing at scene's end; Mrs. Landingham departs to look for them.
President Bartlet's Wristwatch

The President glances at his wristwatch as a pacing device; attempting to read it without his glasses emphasizes distraction and impatience, compressing the scene's tempo while signaling the President’s need for temporal control amid emotional chaos.

Before: Strapped to the President's wrist, functioning but unreadable …
After: Remains on his wrist; he attempts to read …
Before: Strapped to the President's wrist, functioning but unreadable without glasses.
After: Remains on his wrist; he attempts to read it but is hindered by the missing glasses.
Situation Room military/intel briefing packet (for President Bartlet)

A briefing file is held up by Bartlet as he tries to read it to ground his demands in actionable options; the trembling, unreadable paper amplifies his frustration and symbolizes the tension between grief‑driven urgency and procedural documentation.

Before: In the President's hand as he lifts it …
After: Still in his hand at scene’s close as …
Before: In the President's hand as he lifts it to read.
After: Still in his hand at scene’s close as Leo departs; unread fully because of missing glasses.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

2
Oval Office (West Wing, White House)

The White House portico functions as the initial threshold where private grief hardens into public rage. Bartlet and Leo walk it together, giving the eruption a semi‑public theatricality before they enter the Oval Office, establishing a crossing from personal to institutional.

Atmosphere Tense and kinetic — brisk footsteps, clipped exchanges; the outside light and space amplify the …
Function Transitional approach — stage for the unspooling argument that will carry into the Oval.
Symbolism Represents the boundary between private sorrow and the demands of public command.
Access Public exterior of the White House but functionally limited to senior staff and security in …
Daylight on the portico Movement from outside to inside compressing personal into public Footsteps and the sound of the door opening as a hinge
Leo McGarry's Office (Chief of Staff's Office)

Leo's office is referenced as the place Leo departs to ('I got staff') — a pragmatic workspace the President will return to later; it functions as the operational hub where staff will be marshaled to convert rage into plans.

Atmosphere Implied busy, businesslike; a place to translate outrage into work.
Function Operational staging ground and staff command center.
Symbolism Represents the administrative heart where emotion is disciplined into procedure.
Access Restricted to senior staff; not publicly accessible.
Doorway movement as staff flow Implied presence of briefing packets and phones Quiet, purposeful departure of Leo

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What led here 2
Callback medium

"Charlie helping Bartlet find his glasses (in beat_e61c9a8ac467882a) recalls Bartlet's earlier frustration over missing glasses (in beat_eb7cbb5ee5d4e923), showing Charlie's attention to detail."

Charlie Supplies the Phoenix Context
S1E3 · A Proportional Response
Callback medium

"Charlie helping Bartlet find his glasses (in beat_e61c9a8ac467882a) recalls Bartlet's earlier frustration over missing glasses (in beat_eb7cbb5ee5d4e923), showing Charlie's attention to detail."

Leo Reclaims Control: Quietly Redirecting the President
S1E3 · A Proportional Response

Key Dialogue

"BARTLET: "This is crap. It's been three days. This is amateur hour.""
"BARTLET: "We are going to draw up a response scenario today, I'm going to give the order today, we're going to strike back today.""
"LEO: "I wish you wouldn't say 'him', Mr. President.""