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- <text id=93TT1593>
- <link 93TO0137>
- <title>
- May 03, 1993: "Oh, God, They're Killing Themselves
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- May 03, 1993 Tragedy in Waco
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER, Page 26
- "Oh, My God, They're Killing Themselves!"
-
- --FBI agent Bob Ricks
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By NANCY GIBBS--With reporting by Michael Riley and Richard
- Woodbury/Waco and Julie Johnson and Elaine Shannon/Washington
- </p>
- <p> The sun didn't blacken, nor the moon turn red, but the
- world did come to an end, just as their prophet had promised.
- The End drove up to their doorstep in a tank, spitting gas,
- fulfilling prophecies. And if anyone wants to harm them, says
- the Book of Revelation, fire pours from their mouth and consumes
- their foes.
- </p>
- <p> Buzzards circled overhead and the wind blew hard on the
- day the Branch Davidians died. Before the sun came up, state
- troopers went door to door to the houses near the compound,
- telling people to stay inside, there might be some noise. Over
- their loudspeakers, the tired negotiators called one last time
- for David Koresh and his followers to surrender peacefully. Then
- they got on the phone and told him exactly where the tear gas
- was coming, so he could move the children away. The phone came
- sailing out the front door. They will make war on the Lamb, and
- the Lamb will conquer them.
- </p>
- <p> The pounding began a few minutes after 6 a.m., when an
- armored combat engineer vehicle with a long, insistent steel
- nose started prodding a corner of the building. Shots rang out
- from the windows the moment agents began pumping in tear gas.
- A second CEV joined in, buckling walls, breaking windows,
- nudging, nudging, as though moving the building would move those
- inside. "This is not an assault!" agent Byron Sage cried over
- the loudspeakers. "Do not shoot. We are not entering your
- compound." Ambulances waited a mile back; the local hospital,
- Hillcrest Baptist Medical Center, was on alert. But no one was
- supposed to get hurt. "You are responsible for your own
- actions," agents called out. "Come out now and you will not be
- harmed." Do not fear what you are about to suffer...Be
- faithful unto death, and I will give you the crown of life.
- </p>
- <p> Koresh left his apartment on the top floor and stalked the
- halls. "Get your gas masks on," he told them. The masks would
- protect them for hours, even days if they could manage to change
- the filters. Once equipped, people went about their chores:
- women did the laundry, cleaned, or read the Bible in their
- rooms, even as a tank crashed through the front door, past the
- piano, the potato sacks and the propane tank barricaded against
- it.
- </p>
- <p> Once the shooting started, the agents abandoned their plan
- to target the gas where it was least likely to hurt the
- children. The vehicles exhaled clouds through the entire
- building, punching hole after hole through the walls as the
- rounds of bullets rained down. Fleeing the gas, women and
- children clustered in the center of the second floor, from which
- there was no exit. Then suddenly the firing stopped, and a white
- flag emerged from the front door. "Outstanding!" thought the
- leader of the Hostage Rescue Team. "It's gonna work." Koresh's
- chief lieutenant, Steve Schneider, retrieved the telephone, and
- the agents felt a moment of hope. But the firing began again.
- Then the angel took the censer and filled it with fire from the
- altar and threw it on the earth.
- </p>
- <p> A few minutes past noon, FBI snipers say they saw a man in
- a gas mask cupping his hands, as though lighting something.
- Sage grabbed the microphone. "Don't do this to those people,"
- he pleaded over the loudspeaker. "This is not the way to end
- it." He called out to cult members: If you can't see, walk
- toward the loudspeaker, follow the voice. An explosion rocked
- the compound, then another and another as ammunition stores blew
- up. The building shuddered, like the earthquake Koresh had
- foretold.
- </p>
- <p> A short, rumpled lawyer named Danny Coulson watched it all
- on a TV monitor from the "submarine," the FBI's windowless
- command center in Washington. His FBI supervisors and Attorney
- General Janet Reno had been there following the progress all
- morning. Coulson's eyes were tired, black underneath, but he was
- hopeful by nature and still thought the plan would work. He
- founded the hrt, and he had been here before. When the first
- flames came, the room went dead silent. "Well, he's burning the
- arms," Coulson thought, "and he'll walk out and say, `Prove I
- had automatic weapons.' " Then he waited for people to come
- pouring out.
- </p>
- <p> The phone rang in the command center: No one is coming
- out. All Coulson could do was watch, and think about the
- children: "The strongest instinct is a mother's instinct for a
- child." Then word came from Waco that one or two people had been
- spotted outside the building and that agents, protected only by
- their helmets, body armor and green flight suits of
- fire-resistant Nomex, were leaving the safety of their armored
- vehicles and going after them.
- </p>
- <p> Up in a back room in her gas mask, Ruth Riddle was
- clutching her Bible when she felt the heat rising around her.
- She worried that her yellow plastic sandals might melt, so she
- changed into running shoes and looked for a way out. She jumped
- down from a hole punched in the wall and stumbled forward, smoke
- coming out of her clothes. An agent spotted her, climbed out of
- his armored vehicle and ran to her, disappearing into a black
- plume. By the time he reached her, she was trying to get back
- inside with her friends and struggled to fight him off,
- apparently determined to find her way to heaven through hell.
- "Where are the kids? What did you do with them?" the agent
- yelled, but she just shook her head and said nothing as he
- dragged her to safety. And in those days people will seek death
- but not find it; they will long to die, but death will fly from
- them.
- </p>
- <p> A man appeared on the roof, his clothes aflame, rolling in
- pain. Agents moved toward him, but he waved them off. He fell
- off the roof, and the agents ran over, tore off his burning
- clothes and got him safely inside the armored vehicle.
- </p>
- <p> By now 30-m.p.h. prairie winds had sent the flames gulping
- through the compound. The fire raced through the big parlor,
- feeding on the wooden benches and the stacks of Bibles kept by
- the door. The chapel crackled as flames consumed hundreds of
- thousands of dollars' worth of equipment from the messiah's
- rock-'n'-roll band and the wooden pew-like bleachers for his
- audience. Table after table in the cafeteria burned, and rows
- of children's wooden bunk beds upstairs, as the flames spread
- faster, through the attic that ran the length of the building
- like a wind tunnel. It burned fast because it was built on the
- cheap, a tar-paper, yellow-pine and plasterboard crematorium.
- </p>
- <p> The agents watching held out one last hope. As the flames
- rose higher and higher, they remembered the school bus. A
- social worker sent in months before to check on the safety of
- the children had been shown an old bus, stripped of its seats,
- buried underground, to be used as a bunker. Maybe the children
- were safely sealed inside, agents thought. So the moment the
- faded red pumper trucks pulled in, the team leader grabbed his
- gas mask and his M-16 and led 16 men around the blaze to a
- concrete pit filled with thigh-deep water fouled with human
- waste and floating body parts. They waded forward through pitch
- darkness, saw rats swimming past them by the flashlights
- strapped to the tips of their rifles. They reached a door at the
- end that they feared might be booby-trapped; they crashed
- through anyway, into the tunnel that led to the bus. The air
- inside was sweet and cool, free of gas. But there was no one
- inside.
- </p>
- <p> By the time the fire fighters went into the compound, only
- ashes and bones were left, and questions.
- </p>
- <p> When it was all over, the questions belonged to everyone,
- every pundit and prophet and armchair analyst. Did it have to
- end this way? Did the feds just get restless and vengeful at
- the crazy people who had killed four of their colleagues? Were
- the Davidians in fact intending to come out in a matter of
- days? Above all, did the cult members really set out to burn
- themselves and their children alive? Or did the tanks knock down
- their camp lanterns, burst open the propane, accidentally
- tossing a spark onto the tinder? A mass suicide? A mass
- homicide? A ghastly accident?
- </p>
- <p> In the days and long nights before the finale, the
- questions belonged to Janet Reno. A month into her job, Reno
- confronted a disaster she had done nothing to create. The drama
- in the Texas prairie began as she was still standing in the
- wings, mourning her mother and awaiting the Senate's
- confirmation. Reno grew up in the swamps where alligators still
- wander--her mother used to wrestle them--and for 15 years
- she was in charge of enforcing laws in a city where lawbreaking
- is a spectator sport. But nothing could have quite prepared her
- for the choices she faced that fateful week.
- </p>
- <p> The FBI came to her on Monday with their plan, laid out in
- a wine-colored briefing book. That started a week of meetings,
- briefings, phone calls and more meetings in which Reno probed
- the motives and methods the bureau had laid out.
- </p>
- <p> The officials had come to believe that time was no longer
- on their side. For one thing, the team leader told Time's
- Elaine Shannon, "we had run out of other plans." To an impatient
- audience, it may have appeared that all the officials had done
- for 51 days was stand and wait and watch. But members of the
- hrt, especially the snipers, had been on constant alert and were
- wearing down. "My very first concern was that the Davidians
- would exit the compound with a child in one hand and an AK-47
- in the other," Coulson says. "The only civilian unit that can
- eliminate the subject without eliminating the child are hrt
- snipers. They can hit a quarter-inch target at 200 meters." That
- meant, of course, that they had any number of chances to take
- out Koresh. But the agency's rules of engagement forbid them to
- fire on anyone if they are not directly threatened themselves.
- </p>
- <p> The snipers stood shifts around the clock at observation
- posts that were well within the range of Koresh's .50-cal.
- sharpshooting rifles and M-60 machine guns. "All our positions
- were chip shots for them," says Coulson, "an easy head shot."
- The snipers kept their rifle scopes trained on the compound's
- windows, watching as they were fortified for tripod-mounted
- machine guns that could be fired by a man lying on the floor.
- "I don't know if anybody has ever spent any time staring through
- a scope," says one agent, "but I did it for 15 or 20 minutes,
- and it is terribly disorienting. These people had been there for
- 50 days."
- </p>
- <p> The cult leader had broken one deal after another,
- officials reminded Reno. "There were never any real
- negotiations," says Jeffrey Jamar, the beefy FBI agent in charge
- on the ground. "We stayed in touch to avoid provocation, but
- everything was done on his time--he was in strict control."
- Negotiators had learned that Koresh had a particular dread of
- jail, a fear of being raped. "He had all the wives, food and
- liquor he wanted," Coulson says. "Inside, he's God. Outside,
- he's an inmate on trial for his life. What was he going to do?"
- </p>
- <p> They had tried to break him down, switching tactics midway
- through the siege. At first they were respectful. That approach
- got 37 people out, including 21 children, before it stopped
- working. Then their tone switched to disdain, even mockery, and
- the harassment campaign of lights and noises began. "It was not
- there just to irritate them and make their lives miserable,"
- said agent Byron Sage. "It was to keep them on guard, to keep
- them so they weren't at a fine-honed edge."
- </p>
- <p> To make their tactical case, officials had to depend on
- their intelligence from inside the compound, but as Koresh grew
- more paranoid it was harder to gather. The atf had an
- undercover agent inside before the original raid, but his
- shooting skills on the target range may have aroused suspicion.
- After negotiating to send in milk, magazines and a typewriter,
- they tucked in tiny listening devices as well to help them
- monitor Koresh's moods. But cult members were said to have found
- the bugs and destroyed them.
- </p>
- <p> So they had to rely more on the hours of conversations and
- the letters Koresh occasionally dictated to be sent out to the
- besieging forces. The FBI brought these to a team of experts
- they recruited, who drew a psychological portrait of an ever
- more menacing figure, one who believed himself invincible.
- </p>
- <p> Over the weekend of April 10, Koresh sent the FBI two
- letters from God, which Time has obtained, neatly penned on
- lavender notepaper by one of his 19 wives. "I AM your God," he
- wrote, "and you will bow under my feet. Do you think you have
- the power to stop my will?" The ominous letters persuaded the
- psychologists that Koresh would come out only on his own terms,
- probably violent ones. "It is hard to believe that Koresh will
- abdicate his godhood," the experts concluded, "for a limited
- notoriety and time behind bars."
- </p>
- <p> It seemed at times that Koresh was playing with them. His
- mother had hired a fancy lawyer for him, and just as the feds
- were deciding they had to move, Koresh was deciding that he was
- eager to talk. Dick DeGuerin is a renowned defender of infamous
- Texans, a lean, boyish-looking ex-prosecutor known among defense
- lawyers as "Clint Eastwood" for rescuing high-profile figures
- from impossible fixes. He has a gift for winning his clients'
- trust, and it seemed to be working with Koresh. They talked for
- hours inside the compound, sharing chicken a la king and apple
- juice and macadamia nuts, for which Koresh had developed a taste
- during his days recruiting followers in Hawaii. DeGuerin told
- his client that the government did not have much of a case
- against him--an impression the negotiators did not contradict.
- What they heard from the lawyer helped convince them that the
- David ians wanted to come out. All the FBI needed was to open
- the door and yank.
- </p>
- <p> A frontal assault was out of the question. They suspected
- that the entire place was booby-trapped; they knew the sect had
- powerful weapons and night-vision scopes, sentries guarded the
- windows around the clock, and whenever agents approached in
- tanks, cult members held up the children in the windows. The
- strategists talked about using a water cannon, but rejected the
- idea. First, they didn't have an armored fire truck. Second, the
- blast of water was as strong as a wrecking ball and might cause
- the building to collapse on the children inside. Finally, water
- would destroy evidence.
- </p>
- <p> The idea, instead, was to pump in the gas and create
- enough chaos to distract anyone intent on either firing back or
- orchestrating a mass suicide. Perhaps those who were wavering
- would come out.
- </p>
- <p> That was the plan FBI Director William Sessions and his
- top deputies put together for Reno on Monday morning. She
- wanted to see everything, asked hundreds of questions: Why go
- now? What is he likely to do? Is this the best way to go? On
- Wednesday night she called in members of the Army's elite Delta
- Force to ask their opinions. Her questions always came back to
- the children. FBI officials explained that the longer the siege
- lasted, the more the children would suffer. "Children are like
- hostages," Koresh had told one negotiator, "because they're too
- young to make decisions."
- </p>
- <p> And indeed he seemed prepared to treat them that way. When
- negotiators asked him to send out videotapes to show the
- youngsters were safe, Koresh was happy to oblige. The tactic
- worked brilliantly for him. Agents were wrenched by the
- pictures, and even more profoundly engaged after Koresh began
- putting the children on the telephone. "Are you coming to kill
- me?" a tiny voice would ask. "Those kids' faces, you can still
- see them," says FBI agent Bob Ricks. "They are precious,
- innocent children, controlled by a madman."
- </p>
- <p> Koresh would use food as a weapon, even on his own
- children. The cult had stockpiled enough Army rations to last
- for months, but Koresh dispensed them all. His favorites usually
- had the first claim, like the members of his rock band, and his
- Mighty Men, the term referring to the warriors who fought under
- King David in the Old Testament. So for the ultimate task, the
- fight to the death, the warriors would be fed. The weak, the
- vacillating and the helpless would grow weaker and weaker,
- unable to split off if given the chance.
- </p>
- <p> Reno continued to press about the dangers of exposing
- people to gas. Anesthetic gases might knock people out, but
- there was no guarantee that they would wake up, ever, especially
- the small children. Strong men would be knocked out last, or not
- at all. The FBI brought in a leading specialist on the
- toxicology of tear gas, whom Reno debriefed for hours. She
- approved the use of tear gas only after being assured that the
- form the FBI was using was not permanently harmful, carcinogenic
- or a possible cause of birth defects.
- </p>
- <p> The idea, officials said, was not to provoke one major
- showdown, but to gradually increase the pressure. Even as the
- debate in Washington progressed, the Hostage Rescue Team was
- sending in Abrams tanks to close in on the compound, closer and
- closer. Anything lighter, Koresh had threatened to blow "40 feet
- in the air." Then the FBI began removing the fence. "Everyone
- on scene said that's the most provocative thing we can do,"
- says an official. "If we touch that fence, we stand a chance
- that there will be some kind of violent response. So we thought
- long and hard. But we removed it, and there was no action." The
- only rise the FBI managed to get out of Koresh was last Sunday,
- when an armored vehicle towed his precious black Camaro to make
- room for the next day's attack.
- </p>
- <p> Above all Reno needed to know how Koresh would react to
- being pushed and whether the others inside would follow him,
- even unto death. Koresh held over them all the power of the
- Apocalypse; he was the Lamb of Revelation, who alone could open
- the seven seals and foresee the end of the world. FBI agents
- made some effort to get a handle on the theology at work, but
- scholars have been trying to explain these passages for
- centuries with little success. Among those they consulted was
- Phillip Arnold, a specialist in apocalyptic faiths whom Koresh
- respected. He was happy to serve as theological bait, a means
- of helping Koresh get his message out to the world and thereby
- bring about a peaceful resolution.
- </p>
- <p> In the crucial sixth chapter of Revelation, Koresh found
- his timetable. The bloody raid on Feb. 28 signaled the opening
- of the fifth seal. The Bible instructed that they "rest a
- little longer, until the number would be complete both of their
- fellow servants and of their brothers and sisters, who were soon
- to be killed as they themselves had been killed." Which merely
- meant that after a short time had passed, their time to die
- would be upon them. So Arnold and his colleague James Tabor from
- the University of North Carolina at Charlotte worked to sell
- Koresh on a less threatening interpretation.
- </p>
- <p> On April 8 the theologians went on a Dallas radio show and
- tried to persuade Koresh that the prophecy had not yet been
- fulfilled. They dwelt on a verse in Chapter 10: "You must
- prophesy again about many peoples and nations and languages and
- kings." That was probably where Koresh got the idea of writing
- his own explanation of the meaning of the seven seals. His final
- letter was in sharp contrast to the earlier fire and brimstone.
- This one was addressed to DeGuerin and dwelt more on
- distribution rights and other bookkeeping matters. "I hope to
- finish this as soon as possible and to stand before man to
- answer any and all questions regarding my actions," he wrote.
- On the night before the immolation, the FBI sent in milk for the
- children and typewriter ribbons for the author.
- </p>
- <p> Indeed, the desire to spread the message was so strong
- that it helped persuade agents that Koresh did not mean to end
- his life. Reno had to balance conflicting reports about whether
- the Davidians were prepared for a mass suicide, the one finale
- she hoped to avoid at all costs. Four times negotiators asked if
- Koresh planned to kill himself, and four times he denied them.
- "If I wanted to commit suicide," he told them, "I would have
- done that a long time ago." Agents pointed out that Koresh had
- backed away from the brink before. On March 2, when he was
- supposed to surrender, he arranged to strap grenades to his
- body, come out and blow himself up in front of TV cameras. All
- the preparations were made, he kissed the children goodbye in
- the chapel--and then, at the last moment, "chickened out,"
- Ricks said.
- </p>
- <p> But there was also plenty of evidence pointing the other
- way. Fully a year ago the U.S. embassy in Australia, where many
- cult members had lived, sent Washington a cable about the cult,
- warning that the Davidians would never allow themselves to be
- taken alive. As members came out of Ranch Apocalypse, they
- confirmed the planning; a 12-year-old girl told the audience on
- the Phil Donahue show how they were taught to put the barrel of
- a gun in their mouth. The feds took the possibility seriously:
- they collected enough anticyanide kits to provide a lifesaving
- dose for every child and a few of the adults, and the medics of
- the HRT kept them at the ready at the forward command post.
- </p>
- <p> Reno finally reached her decision on Saturday night. The
- Attorney General convened top aides in her fifth-floor
- conference room and demanded that the FBI once again justify its
- operation. "Is this the best way," she asked, to prod Koresh
- without aggravating the situation? "What would happen if we
- don't do it?" What was the risk of losing more lives both inside
- and outside the compound? She shook her head in horror as an FBI
- official offered a graphic description of human waste being
- thrown outside in pails. There was some discussion of child
- abuse, at which point Reno asked the FBI, "You mean, slapping
- them around?" They said yes, and talked about the "ongoing
- pattern of young girls in there being sexually abused." At
- around 7:15 p.m. she approved the operation. By 7:40 Saturday
- night Reno went home.
- </p>
- <p> The following night she called the President and briefed
- him on the plan. They talked for about 15 minutes, as Clinton
- asked about the timing, the possible pitfalls and whether the
- military had been consulted. "I said that if she thought it was
- the right thing to do," he said later, "that she should proceed
- and that I would support it."
- </p>
- <p> In the morning, as the assault began, reporters asked
- Clinton if he knew what was happening. In fact, Clinton had been
- briefed periodically on the progress in Waco from the start, by
- Reno's predecessor Stuart Gerson and by her deputy Webster
- Hubbell, a close friend of the Clintons'. "I was aware of it,"
- he said. "I think the Attorney General made the decision."
- Pushed further, he added, "I knew it was going to be done, but
- the decisions were entirely theirs."
- </p>
- <p> Then he vanished. At about 1 p.m., after the fire broke
- out, White House communications director George Stephanopoulos
- kept a safe distance from the issue at his regular daily
- briefing for reporters: "It's a decision by the Attorney General
- and the FBI." Like everyone else, the White House spent the
- afternoon waiting and watching to see if anyone might survive.
- But after the smoke cleared, Clinton, never camera shy, remained
- in the shadows. The White House released a statement one
- paragraph long. "The law-enforcement agencies involved in the
- Waco Siege recommended the course of action pursued today," it
- said. "I told the Attorney General to do what she thought was
- right, and I stand by that decision."
- </p>
- <p> While a normal politician's instinct, as disaster burns
- around them, is to run for cover, Reno drew herself up tall, 6
- ft. 2 in. tall, and went on national television to say, The
- buck stops with me, I take full responsibility, it was my
- decision, I approved the plans, until journalists and pundits
- and pols were breathless at the audacity of it, an act of
- political self-immolation. She was everywhere on the evening
- news and the talk shows, declaring that after hard thought she
- had reached the best judgment she could and that "based on what
- we know now, obviously it was wrong."
- </p>
- <p> She lost her temper only when reporters suggested that she
- was covering for the President. "I don't do spin stuff," she
- said, "and I'm not distancing anybody from anything." But by the
- time Larry King came round, she still hadn't heard from her
- boss. "They kept missing each other," was the official White
- House explanation. The next day Stephanopoulos began to retreat
- from the retreat as best he could. Clinton rejected calls for
- Reno to resign just because "some religious fanatics murdered
- themselves," and called for investigations at Justice and the
- Treasury Department. The House Judiciary Committee announced it
- would hold hearings as well.
- </p>
- <p> At the scene of the carnage, forensic experts tiptoed
- through still smoking ruins, amid popping ammunition and
- exploding cans of fruit. They removed one soft, crumbling body
- after another, laying them in body bags side by side for removal
- in a refrigerated truck. Tiny orange flags fluttered everywhere
- that bodies had been found--nine of them clustered at the
- central cinder-block bunker, with a weapon still visible mounted
- on top. On the main flagpole, where Koresh liked to fly his Star
- of David flag, the Texas and ATF flags flew at half staff.
- </p>
- <p> Throughout the week family members issued scorching
- assessments of the FBI's performance. "There were law-abiding,
- God-fearing people in there," said Koresh's mother Bonnie
- Haldeman. "They didn't hurt anybody." The most damaging blasts
- came from those who had made it out of the compound. Survivors
- spoke out, either on their own or through DeGuerin and
- Schneider's lawyer Jack Zimmerman, to challenge the official
- version of what happened. "There was never any suicide plan,"
- protested Renos Avraam, a 28-year-old London native who had
- lived in the compound for more than a year, "and never any order
- to destroy the compound. We intended to come out."
- </p>
- <p> As the week progressed the FBI had to back off certain
- claims: that they had fresh evidence of child abuse, that they
- had actually seen a cult member lighting the fire, that some
- victims were shot by fellow Davidians for trying to flee. "The
- Justice Department is pressing emotional trigger buttons,"
- charged Zimmerman, who had worked side by side with DeGuerin
- trying to end the standoff. "It's a public opinion-generated
- effort."
- </p>
- <p> The survivors tell a harrowing story of the final hours.
- At noon, Avraam told his lawyer, "many of us were toward the
- front when a tank ran into a corner of the building and it
- basically collapsed. Then someone shouted, `A fire has started!'
- The black smoke was intense. I couldn't see." Some speculated
- that the tanks punctured the propane tank barricading the door,
- sending flames speeding through a storage room full of gallon
- fuel containers for the lanterns, lighting the hay bales and
- other debris. Children and others in the outside rooms fled them
- for interior areas, but within minutes these were ablaze too.
- David Thibodeau, one of the Mighty Men, told his mother that he
- tried to run upstairs to get to the children, but the way was
- blocked. "People had no time to get out. The fire spread very
- fast," says Avraam, who escaped by diving out a window.
- </p>
- <p> FBI agents who watched the hideous finale from ground zero
- adamantly dismiss the notion that they somehow started the
- inferno. "I saw three fires almost simultaneously," insists
- Sage. "There's no question but that it was not started by the
- tanks in front of building. That's ridiculous. I saw the tanks
- at different points from where the fires were." He, like others,
- had no choice but to stand and watch. "I can't tell you what was
- going through my heart," he says. "A combination of anguish,
- reflection and absolute anger for David Koresh. Because the
- bottom line here is that with complete and unthinking malice he
- had murdered all those people."
- </p>
- <p> Officials at Justice braced themselves for the backbiting.
- Privately, counter terrorist experts in other branches made no
- bones about what they would have done differently. "I wouldn't
- have pumped gas in there," said one official, "and I wouldn't
- have called them first." Others charged that the mistake was not
- only in tactics, but in attitude. "This wasn't a normal hostage
- situation," said a Justice official. "Not only were they there,
- they were willing to do anything for this person." A
- congressional aide put it differently: "They acted like they
- thought they were talking to another bank robber. Instead, they
- were talking to someone who was dealing in a parallel universe."
- </p>
- <p> Critics were especially blistering on the subject of the
- FBI's impatience. "When you look at this, I think you not only
- need to understand the psychology of cults but you need to
- understand the psychology of law enforcement as well," said a
- congressional aide. "They had been challenged, more than four
- of their agents had been killed, there was the day-in, day-out
- appearance of impotence in a profession in which control is so
- important."
- </p>
- <p> Theologian Arnold laments that the FBI did not take the
- underlying religious issues more seriously. The pull of faith
- was so strong that some Branch David ians who escaped wished
- they had instead been consumed by the flames. "They took that
- to be a big joke, all that talk about the seven seals," he says.
- "The seven seals was his language, and if you didn't speak that
- language, there was no way of showing him what he had to do."
- </p>
- <p> But Jamar and other agents scoff at the notion that either
- scholars or family members could have succeeded in getting
- anyone out. "We could have spent seven months allowing this all
- to happen.'' As for the Bible experts, "they could have argued
- religion with him for hours and it wouldn't have done any good.
- You going to talk someone out of being the Messiah? It's a lot
- to give up."
- </p>
- <p> In the end, even the fiercest critics could not deny that
- it was Koresh who placed 25 children in harm's way, who preyed
- on people who were weak and lonely and hungry for certainty.
- Certainty he gave them, and abundantly. He was certain of his
- vision of good and evil, certain of his special insight into the
- deepest mysteries of faith, certain of an afterlife that
- promised glory for those who had suffered for their souls. If he
- is right about that, and there is any justice in it, Koresh has
- not seen the last of the flames. And the devil who had deceived
- them was thrown into the lake of fire and sulfur, where the
- beast and the false prophet were, and they will be tormented day
- and night forever and ever.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-