Elaina Plott Calabro Profile picture
Aug 27 14 tweets 3 min read Read on X
In the course of reporting on Patel, and the threat that he and other loyalists like him would pose to the country in a second Trump term, I struggled to shake what I learned about a series of events that took place on October 30, 2020. I want to share them with you here. 🧵
On that Friday, according to multiple reported accounts, SEAL Team 6 was awaiting the green light on a rescue mission in West Africa. The admin had recently learned where gunmen were holding an American who had been kidnapped that week from his farm near the Niger/Nigeria border.
As multiple agencies coordinated on final details for the evening operation, the State Department worked to resolve the last outstanding task: securing airspace permission from Nigerian officials.
Around noon, Patel called the Pentagon with an update: Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, he said, had gotten the approval. The mission was a go.
The SEALs were close to landing in Nigeria when DOD discovered that State had not, in fact, secured the clearance, as Patel had claimed. The aircraft were quickly diverted, and flew in circles for the next hour as officials scrambled to alert the Nigerian gov't to their position.
With the operation window narrowing, Esper and Pompeo called the Situation Room to put the decision to the president: Either they abort the mission and risk their hostage being killed, or they proceed into foreign airspace and risk their soldiers being shot down.
But then, suddenly, the deputy secretary of state was on the line, Esper later wrote in his memoir: They'd been cleared, and the rescue operation was ultimately a success. But back in Washington, the celebration was checked by anger. How to make sense of Patel's bad report?
Two people familiar with the exchange told me that Tony Tata, the Pentagon official and retired Army general to whom Patel had originally given the green light, confronted Patel in a rage. "You could've gotten these guys killed!" he shouted. "What the fuck were you thinking?"
Patel's response: "If nobody got hurt, who the fuck cares?"
Through a spokesperson, Patel denied saying this, or making up the approval story. But three former senior administration officials independently cited the near catastrophe in West Africa as one of their foremost recollections from Patel's tenure.
They remain unsettled by Patel's actions, they told me, in large part because they have no clue what motivated them. If Patel had in fact just invented the story, as Esper's team concluded, then why?
Was it because the election was in four days, and Patel was simply that impatient to set in motion a final potential victory for Trump, whatever the risk — was it as darkly cynical as that? Did his lack of experience mean he just had no grasp of the consequences?
I don't know the answers to these questions. But three months of reporting later, they're the questions I can't stop thinking about it — particularly as Patel, in a second Trump term, could very well assume remarkable power atop America's national security establishment.
Anyway, if you've made it this far, I hope you'll read the whole story, from our October issue, here: theatlantic.com/magazine/archi…

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More from @elainaplott

Dec 5, 2022
I did a lot of reporting for this piece, but nothing quite stood out like my interview with Johnny Tallant, a teacher at Marjorie Taylor Greene's high school whose class was held hostage by an armed student in 1990. This was during Greene's junior year... (Brief thread)
What happened was this: A sophomore entered the school, fired a rifle overhead, and marched students from one classroom into Tallant's (also full) classroom next door. In other words, Tallant was among those held hostage and experienced everything firsthand.
Naturally, Tallant and the some 40 students were terrified; the student threatened to kill them if his demands for candy, soda, and a school bus were not met. But eventually their nerves calmed.
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