You might not think it possible, but after the botched Bay of Pigs invasion some people in Washington started pointing fingers. One of many digits were levelled at a dearth of current and accurate tactical information. In addition, there was a need to consolidate secure hotline communication anywhere in the world and to foreign governments. To that end, John F. Kennedy ordered the creation of such a White House apparatus in 1961. For $35,000, a former Truman-era bowling alley was renovated into a 24-7 complex synthesizing second-by-second global intelligence. Think the executive branch crossing a surgical theater with NASA’s Mission Control.
Narrated by Stephanopoulos himself, this is the story of the “sit room” and its inhabitants — from Presidents to intrepid overnight duty officers. George throws a microphone on staff who were at the table during our nation’s most harrowing hours, and tosses in chilling anecdotes from heightened threat levels. In fact, with the audio version you get to hear authentic audio such as during JFK’s assassination a mere two years after the Situation Room’s founding. Other highlights include Vietnam, The Cold War, Reagan assassination attempt, 9-11, Operation Neptune Spear (Bin Laden raid), and January 6th, 2021.
Americans aren’t the only ones to use the Situation Room. In fact, to defuse the brinksmanship of the Cuban Missile crisis the Kremlin announced on Radio Moscow in hopes it would reach Kennedy quicker than through diplomatic channels. We’re still here because Kruschev was correct. The Situation Room is always on top of the situation, even when the president has been, ahem, overserved. The sit room has had several massive renovations — the last to the tune of $50 million in 2023. But really, it’s more emblematic to envision the brain trust convening in a broom closet to watch bin Laden meet his maker over Skype. Simplicity on the surface, but deadly effective one you get past the wood veneer. And you thought you had a killer office.