Santa Fe New Mexican

‘Clear the Capitol,’ Pence pleaded, timeline shows

New details surface from Pentagon’s report

- By Lisa Mascaro, Ben Fox and Lolita C. Baldor

WASHINGTON — From a secure room in the Capitol on Jan. 6, as rioters pummeled police and vandalized the building, Vice President Mike Pence tried to assert control. In an urgent phone call to the acting defense secretary, he issued a startling demand. “Clear the Capitol,” Pence said. Elsewhere in the building, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi were making a similarly dire appeal to military leaders, asking the Army to deploy the National Guard.

“We need help,” Schumer, D-N.Y., said in desperatio­n, more than an hour after the Senate chamber had been breached.

At the Pentagon, officials were discussing media reports that the mayhem was not confined to Washington and that other state capitals were facing similar violence in what had the makings of a national insurrecti­on.

“We must establish order,” said Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, in a call with Pentagon leaders.

But order would not be restored for hours. These new details about the deadly riot are contained in a previously undisclose­d document prepared by the Pentagon for internal use that was obtained by the Associated Press and vetted by current and former government officials.

The timeline adds another layer of understand­ing about the state of fear and panic while the insurrecti­on played out, and lays bare the inaction by then-President Donald Trump and how that void contribute­d to a slowed response by the military and law enforcemen­t. It shows that the intelligen­ce missteps, tactical errors and bureaucrat­ic delays were eclipsed by the government’s failure to comprehend the scale and intensity of a violent uprising by its own citizens.

With Trump not engaged, it fell to Pentagon officials, a handful of senior White House aides, the leaders of Congress and the vice president holed up in a secure bunker to manage the chaos.

While the timeline helps to crystalize the frantic character of the crisis, the document, along with hours of sworn testimony, provides only an incomplete picture about how the insurrecti­on could have advanced with such swift and lethal force, interrupti­ng the congressio­nal certificat­ion of Joe Biden as president and delaying the peaceful transfer of power, the hallmark of American democracy.

Lawmakers, protected to this day by National Guard troops, will hear from the inspector general of the Capitol Police this week.

“Any minute that we lost, I need to know why,” Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., chairwoman of the Senate Rules and Administra­tion Committee, which is investigat­ing the siege, said last month.

The timeline fills in some of those gaps. At 4:08 p.m. Jan. 6, as the rioters roamed the Capitol and after they had menacingly called out for Pelosi, D-Calif., and yelled for Pence to be hanged, the vice president was in a secure location, phoning Christophe­r Miller, the acting defense secretary, and demanding answers.

There had been a highly public rift between Trump and Pence, with Trump furious that his vice president refused to halt the Electoral College certificat­ion. Interferin­g with that process was an act that Pence considered unconstitu­tional. The Constituti­on makes clear that the vice president’s role in this joint session of Congress is largely ceremonial.

Pence’s call to Miller lasted only a minute. Pence said the Capitol was not secure and he asked military leaders for a deadline for securing the building, according to the document.

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