Through the lens of Alliance Theory, the Secret Service is the ultimate validator of physical sovereignty. While the FBI manages the “informational” and “legal” alliances of the state, the Secret Service manages the physical space where the coalition’s leaders exist. If an assassin succeeds, they aren’t just killing a person; they are forcibly “de-platforming” a coalition leader and bypassing the entire alliance’s rules for power transfer.
The monopoly on the “Inner Circle”
The Secret Service possesses a unique form of social capital: proximity. By controlling who gets near the President or a candidate, the agency acts as a literal gatekeeper to the coalition’s most valuable nodes. This creates a “security-loyalty” symmetry. The protected individual must trust the agency with their life, which grants the agency an informal but massive influence over the logistics of political power. They decide the “perimeter,” and in doing so, they define the physical boundaries of the political arena.
The “Failure of Coordination” as a Coalitional Risk
In the 2024 assassination attempt on Donald Trump, Alliance Theory suggests the breakdown was not just tactical but structural. The Secret Service relies on a “vertical alliance” with local police (snipers, perimeter patrol) and a “horizontal alliance” with the campaign’s own staff. When these alliances have friction—due to radio incompatibility, blurred jurisdictions, or differing priorities—the “protective bubble” leaks. In the aftermath, the agency’s frantic reputational signaling (resignations, internal reviews) is a desperate attempt to reassure its elite allies that the “zero-failure” brand remains intact. If the elite lose faith in the “bubble,” they stop participating in the public events that sustain their political legitimacy.
The “Stalker” vs. the “Professional”
The agency’s protective intelligence must distinguish between two different types of “rival claimants” to the leader’s space.
The Infatuated/Grievance-Driven: These are often lone actors looking for “status” through a historic act. The Secret Service uses “behavioral intercept” to identify these people before they move from “interest” to “approach.”
The State-Backed Assassin: This is a “coalition-on-coalition” attack. When a foreign intelligence service (like Iran’s reported plots) targets a U.S. official, it is a direct attempt by a rival global alliance to decapitate the American leadership. The Secret Service’s response here is not just law enforcement; it is a counter-intelligence operation designed to signal that the cost of “breaking the bubble” is total war.
The “Bodyguard” as an Institutional Witness
Because agents see the private behavior of the elite, they hold a dangerous form of “reputational currency.” This creates a permanent tension. The ruling coalition needs the protection, but it fears the transparency. This explains the intense secrecy surrounding the agency’s internal communications (such as the controversy over deleted text messages). To maintain its alliance with the Executive, the agency must prove it can keep “family secrets” as well as it keeps “physical safety.” If they become a source of leaks, their primary alliance with the President collapses.
The ritual of the “Motorcade”
The motorcade is the Secret Service’s most visible signal of regime power. It is a mobile fortress that demonstrates the state’s ability to suspend the normal rules of the city (closing roads, ignoring traffic) to move a leader. This is a purification ritual. It separates the “Sacred Leader” from the “Profane Public.” Under Alliance Theory, this ritual reinforces the status of the leader and the competence of the guardian class. It tells the public—and rival coalitions—that this individual is “more than” a citizen; they are the personification of the state’s continuity.
The threat of “Insider Erosion”
The greatest fear for a “guardian” alliance is the “Praetorian Guard” problem: what happens when the protectors develop their own political preferences? If the Secret Service is perceived as being “more loyal” to one candidate than another, its role as a neutral “infrastructure provider” for the whole governing class fails. The agency must constantly signal “procedural neutrality” to ensure that whoever wins the next election will still trust them to stand behind the podium.
The United States Secret Service looks very different when you analyze it through David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory. Its core mission is not just protection. Its deeper function is maintaining the physical safety of the American governing coalition.
The agency protects the people who embody the legitimacy of the state. That gives it a unique position in the federal system.
The Secret Service protects symbols of regime continuity
The individuals under protection include the president, vice president, major presidential candidates, visiting heads of state, and key institutions.
These include figures like Donald Trump, Joe Biden, and their successors and rivals.
From an Alliance Theory perspective, these people represent the leadership nodes of the political system.
If one of them is killed, the legitimacy and stability of the regime itself is threatened.
The Secret Service therefore protects what you might call the leadership infrastructure of the American alliance system.
This explains why assassination attempts trigger such massive institutional response.
The agency’s alliance network
Unlike most federal agencies, the Secret Service sits at the center of several different alliances at once.
The White House and executive branch
Presidential campaigns and political parties
Local police departments
The intelligence community
Foreign security services
Every presidential event requires cooperation between all of these actors.
The Secret Service becomes the coordinator of that coalition.
Its authority at events is unusually strong because every other security actor defers to its protective mandate.
The culture of zero failure
The Secret Service has one of the most unforgiving incentive systems in government.
Success is invisible.
Failure is catastrophic.
If nothing happens, the public barely notices the agency.
If a president is injured or killed, the consequences are historic.
This creates a culture built around risk minimization, redundancy, and obsessive attention to security procedures.
Agents are trained to assume that someone, somewhere, may attempt an attack.
Threat assessment as a core function
One of the agency’s most important units is its protective intelligence division.
Instead of waiting for crimes, analysts study patterns of behavior that often precede attacks.
They examine individuals who:
Make threats against officials
Show fixation on protected figures
Attempt to approach protected sites
Display escalating grievance narratives
Many potential attackers are intercepted months or years before an incident occurs.
This approach developed after the assassinations of John F. Kennedy and Ronald Reagan’s attempted assassination in 1981.
Those events forced the agency to focus more heavily on behavioral warning signs.
The operational mindset
The Secret Service does not operate like typical investigators.
Its mindset is spatial and anticipatory.
Agents think in terms of environments and vulnerabilities.
Lines of sight
Elevated positions
Crowd dynamics
Escape routes
Ballistic angles
Every public event is analyzed in advance with these factors in mind.
The goal is to eliminate opportunities before an attacker can exploit them.
Relationship with other security agencies
The Secret Service works closely with the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the broader intelligence community.
The FBI focuses on identifying criminal conspiracies and terrorist plots.
The Secret Service focuses on protecting specific individuals and events.
When intelligence suggests a potential threat, the two agencies coordinate.
The FBI investigates the suspect.
The Secret Service adjusts the protective environment.
Why the agency faces unique pressure
Because the Secret Service protects visible political figures, it operates under intense scrutiny.
Any failure immediately becomes national news.
This dynamic became especially clear after the 2024 assassination attempt against Trump.
The agency was criticized for security gaps that allowed a gunman to obtain a firing position near a campaign rally.
Events like that threaten the core reputation of the institution.
Alliance Theory interpretation
Through the lens of Alliance Theory, the Secret Service performs a very specific function.
It protects the physical continuity of the American governing alliance.
Political coalitions fight elections and argue over policy. But they all rely on the same security infrastructure that keeps leaders alive.
If that infrastructure fails, the entire political system becomes unstable.
That is why the Secret Service occupies a unique place in the American state.
It is less a law enforcement agency than a guardian of regime stability.
An advance team transforms a city into a temporary high-security colony of the executive branch. Under Alliance Theory, this is a “rapid-response coalition” that the Secret Service builds from scratch in every new location. The agency arrives days or weeks before the protected person to recruit local allies, map vulnerabilities, and establish a hierarchy where the federal mandate overrides local sovereignty.
The leverage of the “Event Host”
The Secret Service uses a “security-for-prestige” exchange with local city governments. A presidential or candidate visit brings immense status to a local mayor, a police chief, or a venue owner. In return for this reflected glory, the local actors must surrender control of their territory. The advance team dictates where people can stand, which windows must stay closed, and who can enter the “inner perimeter.” This is a temporary alliance where the Secret Service provides the “prestige” and the local city provides the “manpower and infrastructure.”
Command and control as a status signal
The most visible sign of this alliance is the “Joint Operations Center” or JOC. This is the central hub where the Secret Service, FBI, local police, fire departments, and medical teams sit together. By placing itself at the head of the table, the Secret Service signals its status as the “senior partner.” It manages the flow of information and decides which local resources are “trusted” enough to be near the protected individual. This hierarchy ensures that the “zero-failure” culture of the agency is imposed on local partners who might otherwise have more relaxed standards.
The “Site Survey” as a ritual of purification
The advance team performs a “site survey” that functions as a ritual to remove any “profane” or “uncontrolled” elements from a space. They identify “high-ground” positions, “choke points,” and “escape vectors.” If a local business or a private residence overlooks the site, the advance team must “neutralize” that vulnerability through an alliance with the owner or by stationing a local officer there. This process turns a public or private space into a “sanctified” zone where the state has total visibility.
The cost of local cooperation
These temporary alliances are expensive. Local police departments often spend hundreds of thousands of dollars in overtime to support a visit. While the federal government sometimes reimburses these costs, the “debt” is often a source of friction. If a city feels that the “prestige” of the visit is not worth the “economic drain,” the alliance weakens. This can lead to the kind of “resource thinning” that critics pointed to after the 2024 Butler incident. When the “vertical alliance” between the Secret Service and local police lacks sufficient resources or clear communication, the “protective bubble” becomes porous.
The “Unseen” infrastructure
Beyond the visible police presence, the advance team coordinates with hospitals, utility companies, and even local air traffic control. They secure “hospital routes” and ensure that “emergency power” is available. This is a “total-system” alliance. It assumes that a successful attack could involve more than just a gunman—it could include a cyber-attack on the grid or a biological threat. By tethering every local utility and emergency service to its mission, the Secret Service ensures that the “regime infrastructure” remains operational regardless of the environment.
The departure and the “Dissolution”
Once the motorcade leaves for the airport, the alliance dissolves almost instantly. The Secret Service retrieves its “specialized gear,” the local police go back to their regular patrols, and the city returns to its “unsecured” state. This “pop-up” nature of Secret Service operations is a remarkable feat of organizational logic. It shows how a small agency can project “total authority” anywhere in the world by successfully managing a series of high-intensity, short-term alliances.
Zero Fail: The Rise and Fall of the Secret Service by Carol Leonnig
Here’s what’s happened to the main “Zero Fail” problem set since Leonnig wrote the book, using the July 13, 2024 Butler failure as the stress test.
Training and tech are still the soft underbelly
The post Butler reviews describe basic operational breakdowns that look a lot like Leonnig’s “outdated equipment and spotty training” theme. GAO findings summarized by Sen. Grassley describe malfunctioning counter drone gear, an operator who reported getting about one hour of training on that system, and poor communications because people were leaning on cell phones with bad service and no real pre plan to solve that.
The House task force also points to “preexisting issues in leadership and training” that created the conditions for failure.
Information sharing is a core failure, not a footnote
Leonnig’s story is partly about silos and internal politics. The 2024 Butler record puts that front and center. Grassley’s release of the GAO audit says the Secret Service lacked a process to share classified threat information with partners when it was not deemed “imminent,” and that this contributed to local and even protective personnel not being aware of an active threat picture.
That is basically the “we can’t coordinate because we’re not built to coordinate” problem, updated for a more complex threat environment.
Advance work quality and role clarity still look shaky
One of Leonnig’s biggest claims is that the Service survives by heroic effort and luck because management systems are weak. The task force report describes inexperienced personnel being put into major advance roles for a high risk outdoor venue and confusion over who owned what responsibilities.
Grassley’s GAO summary also says key roles were carried out without clear responsibility definitions, and some agents relied on their own experience instead of clear doctrine.
Resource strain is real, but it is not the whole explanation
The Service has long argued it is stretched thin. After Butler, the agency again pointed to staffing shortages. But Government Executive reports that reviewers generally did not treat workforce size as the main driver of the Butler failure.
So the update is blunt: even if Congress throws money at the problem, process and competence gaps can still produce a “how did they miss that roof” outcome.
Leadership churn happened, but churn is not reform
Cheatle resigned in July 2024 after the Butler attempt.
Ronald Rowe served as acting director, then retired after Sean Curran was appointed director.
That is accountability in the narrow sense. It does not automatically fix promotions, training doctrine, tech procurement, or the internal culture Leonnig describes.
The big “Zero Fail” pattern still holds
The reforms tend to follow failure. The task force called the Butler event preventable and produced a big recommendations list.
Grassley’s GAO summary emphasizes concrete fixes like threat sharing processes, clearer roles, better comms planning, and cUAS training and reliability.
That is the same cycle Leonnig describes. The Service improves after embarrassment, then drifts as tempo and mission creep grind it down.
Outdated equipment and spotty training
Still a live problem. The GAO found that key threat information was not shared internally and that protective planning suffered from gaps in training and guidance, including around counter drone operations and communications. The GAO also flagged that resource allocation was not set up to comprehensively consider all known risks, which is another way of saying tools and assets get deployed ad hoc.
The House task force likewise described systemic failures in planning, execution, leadership, and coordination with partners, which is exactly the environment where “we got lucky” becomes the hidden operating model.
Net. Some fixes were proposed and some were reportedly implemented, but the core vulnerability remains. A modern outdoor rally is a tech and comms problem as much as a guns and bodies problem.
Information sharing and coordination with locals
This is the clearest “not fixed” category. The GAO’s headline finding is that the Secret Service had no process to share classified threat information with partners when it was not considered imminent, and it ties that directly to protective personnel and local partners not getting what they needed.
Pennsylvania reporting on the Butler case also emphasizes fragmented communications and disjoint command arrangements rather than a unified command post.
Net. This is the most important update to your Zero Fail bullets. The modern protective environment is coalition work. The Service still struggles at coalition work.
Rigid management, discipline gaps, and “two sets of rules”
Partially addressed, but the pattern is not obviously broken. There were real personnel consequences tied to Butler. The Washington Post reported six agents suspended without pay, with suspensions reportedly ranging from 10 to 42 days and reassignments away from operational roles.
The Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee report documents a long trail of disciplinary actions and grievance processes stemming from the incident.
Net. Suspensions show accountability exists. They do not prove the promotion culture, internal fear of retaliation, and leadership incentives changed. Zero Fail’s claim is that the system only meaningfully reforms after public humiliation. Butler fits that model.
Leadership failure and “cup of coffee” churn
Mixed. The director resigned after Butler, and there was subsequent leadership turnover, which is classic post failure response.
But your bigger Zero Fail concern is not whether one director gets bounced. It is whether the institution stops rewarding short term risk avoidance and starts rewarding competence, candor, and hard decisions. The public record since Butler shows lots of reviews and recommendations. It is harder to find evidence of deep structural change because many of those internal reforms are not transparent and some oversight is now reportedly being obstructed.
Mission creep and being spread dangerously thin
Not solved and probably getting worse. The core mission has only expanded over time, and Butler showed what happens when advance, comms, counter drone, countersniper coverage, and local coordination all have to be perfect at once. The GAO’s point that resource decisions were not comprehensively tied to “all known risks” is an institutional version of mission creep outpacing planning capacity.
Reliance on “throw bodies at the problem” rather than strategy and systems
Still true, but the body heavy approach now has diminishing returns because the threat surface has exploded. Butler was a rooftop, line of sight, counter drone, comms, and perimeter responsibility failure. Adding more people does not automatically fix a planning and integration failure. The task force frames the breakdown as planning and leadership, not a simple headcount problem.
Protectee behavior and political pressure on protection
This is structurally permanent. Zero Fail shows presidents and candidates routinely push risk onto the detail. Butler reinforces that the Service cannot always force optimal security choices because it sits downstream of campaign choices, venue constraints, and local partner realities. The GAO and task force focus less on “protectee recklessness” and more on how the Service managed the environment anyway, which is a subtle shift. The expectation now is that the Service must be able to protect even when the venue is imperfect, the schedule is brutal, and the coalition is messy.
Morale and culture problems
Hard to measure from public documents, but the indicators you would watch are retention, training time, and whether the agency can standardize doctrine instead of relying on informal “tribal knowledge.” The GAO’s emphasis on lack of process, lack of guidance, and inconsistent sharing is consistent with a culture that still relies too much on informal networks.
The biggest confirmed “still broken” items are information sharing, interagency coordination, and disciplined planning processes. The biggest confirmed “partially improved” item is accountability in the narrow sense of suspensions and leadership turnover.
The scariest update is that oversight itself is becoming politicized and obstructed, which is how organizations backslide after the news cycle moves on.
The Secret Service operates as a physical insurance policy for the American political class. While the FBI protects the “truth” through investigative files, the Secret Service protects the “body” of the state. When you apply Alliance Theory to the post-Butler landscape and Carol Leonnig’s Zero Fail thesis, several deep structural layers emerge.
The “Sacrifice of the Agent” as a Credibility Signal
In Alliance Theory, a coalition is only as strong as the costs its members are willing to pay. The Secret Service uses the “human shield” doctrine as its ultimate reputational signal. By training agents to literally use their bodies to intercept ballistics, the agency signals to the political elite that its loyalty is absolute. This creates a “blood-bond” between the protector and the protected. However, as Leonnig argues, when the agency fails—as it did in Butler—the elite’s trust doesn’t just dip; it collapses. The “zero-fail” brand is binary. Once the “bubble” is proven to be penetrable, the cost of participation in public politics for the elite rises exponentially.
The “Sub-Coalition” Friction
The Butler failure highlights a breakdown in what we can call coalitional synchronization. The Secret Service (the federal hub) failed to effectively manage its “vertical” alliance with local Pennsylvania law enforcement.
Information Asymmetry: The agency held classified threat data but did not “spend” it by sharing it with local snipers.
Status Conflict: Local officers often feel like “second-class citizens” in these alliances, leading to the communication gaps Leonnig describes.
When the federal hub treats local partners as mere “peripherals” rather than stakeholders, the local allies stop looking for the “rooftop threat” and start waiting for instructions.
The “Success Trap” and Institutional Decay
Alliance Theory predicts that institutions with a monopoly on a service (protection) become prone to “rent-seeking” and decay. Because the Secret Service has no competitors, it lacks the market pressure to innovate its tech or training. Leonnig’s “outdated equipment” theme is a symptom of an agency that knows its “client” (the President) has no other choice. This leads to strategic atrophy, where the agency relies on its historic prestige rather than current competence. The “heroic effort” Leonnig mentions is a high-cost way to compensate for a low-functioning system.
Protection as a “Positional Good”
The Secret Service is currently facing a scarcity crisis. As the governing coalition expands to include more former presidents, their families, and high-risk candidates, the “protective currency” is being devalued.
Mission Creep: Every new protectee drains resources from the “Primary Node” (the sitting President).
The Resource War: When the agency is spread thin, it is forced to make “risk-allocation” decisions that are inherently political.
If a rival candidate receives a “thinner” detail than the incumbent, it is interpreted not as a resource issue, but as a coalitional betrayal.
The “Technological Asymmetry” Threat
The “counter-drone” failures in Butler reveal a new gap in the agency’s alliance strategy. The Secret Service is optimized for ballistic threats (snipers and handguns), but it is behind the curve on informational and autonomous threats.
The Drone Gap: An attacker with a $500 drone can bypass a $50 million security detail.
The Comms Gap: Relying on personal cell phones in a dead zone is a failure of the “technical-bureaucratic firewall” that defines elite agencies.
The agency’s inability to master these new domains suggests it is losing its status as the “master of the environment.”
The “Accountability Ritual”
The resignations and suspensions after Butler are purification rituals. To maintain its alliance with Congress and the public, the agency must “sacrifice” its leadership. However, as you noted, churn is not reform. Under Alliance Theory, true reform only happens when the incentive structure changes. Until agents are rewarded for “candor and hard decisions” rather than “loyalty and silence,” the Zero Fail cycle Leonnig identified will continue. The agency remains a “guardian of stability” that is itself increasingly unstable.
The Secret Service manages the “Dark Web” not as a digital police force, but as an early-warning sensor for its physical protective bubble. Under Alliance Theory, the Dark Web represents an “unregulated information market” where rival coalitions—terrorist cells, state actors, or lone extremists—trade the “currency” of assassination: targeting dossiers, schedules, and floor plans.
The “Dossier-Market” Intercept
Protective intelligence teams monitor underground forums to identify the sale of “PII” (Personally Identifiable Information) belonging to protected figures or their inner circles. In the logic of the agency, a data breach at a hotel where a candidate is staying is not just a financial crime; it is an operational precursor. By identifying these data leaks early, the Secret Service can “devalue” the information by shifting the candidate’s travel route or changing the “secure room” location. This is a strategic move to preserve the informational advantage that keeps the “Sacred Leader” separate from the “Profane Public.”
Identifying the “Pathway to Violence” via AI
The agency’s National Threat Assessment Center (NTAC) uses AI-driven Open Source Intelligence (OSINT) to filter the massive noise of the digital world. They look for “clusters” of behavioral signals that indicate an individual is moving from a general grievance to a specific plan.
The Linguistic Shift: AI models flag changes in tone—from complaining about a policy to using “warrior” or “martyr” imagery.
The “Friction” Strategy: When the agency identifies a potential lone actor, they may coordinate with platforms to implement “friction tools” (like CAPTCHAs or rate limits) that make it harder for the individual to harvest the OSINT data—such as satellite maps or motorcade routes—needed for an attack.
The “Dark-Int” Counter-Intelligence
When dealing with state-backed threats (like Iranian or Chinese intelligence), the Dark Web becomes a battlefield for counter-intelligence. The Secret Service looks for “Initial Access Brokers” (IABs) who sell access to secure networks or private surveillance feeds. If a foreign rival purchases access to a camera system overlooking a protected site, the Secret Service treats it as a “declaration of intent.” They respond by hardening the physical environment and signaling to the rival coalition that their “digital window” has been closed.
The “Continuous Vetting” of the Inner Circle
The agency also uses these tools for “Continuous Evaluation” of its own agents and the local police allies it relies on. They monitor for “leaked credentials” or “financial distress” signals on the Dark Web that could make a member of the protective detail vulnerable to recruitment by a rival coalition. This is the internal defense against the “Praetorian Guard” problem; the agency must ensure that the “shield” itself has no cracks that a rival could exploit.
The Legal-Managerial Boundary
Monitoring the Dark Web pushes the Secret Service to the edge of its domestic legal alliance. Because these spaces often involve encrypted or private communications, the agency must balance its “protective mandate” with “privacy regulations.” By framing its activities as “threat assessment” rather than “criminal investigation,” the agency maintains its status as a guardian of stability while avoiding the “partisan” label that often plagues the FBI’s more aggressive domestic surveillance.
The Secret Service treats social media not as a digital public square, but as a real-time spatial intelligence map. Under Alliance Theory, a coordinated disruption—like a flash mob or a “swarm” protest—is a direct attempt to overwhelm the agency’s physical monopoly on the “inner circle.”
The “Pulse-Check” of the Perimeter
The agency’s Protective Intelligence (PI) teams use sophisticated Open Source Intelligence (OSINT) tools to monitor “high-velocity” keywords and geolocation tags near a protected site. They are looking for coordination signals: a sudden spike in posts from a specific geographic coordinate or the use of encrypted-app “invite links” shared on public platforms. If a “flash mob” is organizing to block a motorcade route, the agency sees the digital “gathering” before the physical crowd ever forms. This allows them to “pivot” the route in real time, preserving the leader’s physical sovereignty without a direct confrontation.
Managing the “Swarm” Logic
Coordinated disruptions rely on the “swarm” logic—using superior numbers to paralyze the security infrastructure. The Secret Service responds by building a digital-to-physical bridge.
The Digital Sensor: PI teams identify the “organizing nodes” (the accounts leading the charge).
The Physical Response: Advance teams at the Joint Operations Center (JOC) relay this data to local police partners.
By identifying the “arrival vectors” of a crowd, the agency can pre-deploy barriers or “filter points” to break the crowd’s momentum before it reaches the “hard perimeter.”
The “Counter-Narrative” in the JOC
In the 2024 and 2025 security cycles, the agency has leaned heavily on Joint Information Centers (JICs) to manage the “reputational” side of a disruption. If a protest occurs, the rival coalition will immediately post videos of the “security response” to frame the agency as an aggressor. The Secret Service counters this by using its own social media monitoring to identify these viral clips and releasing its own “vetted” footage or statements through the JIC. This is a battle over coalition legitimacy; the agency must prove that its use of force was “proportional” and “procedural” to maintain its alliance with the media and the public.
The “Bystander” as an Unwitting Ally
The Secret Service also exploits the “digital footprint” of the general public. At a large event, thousands of people are livestreaming and posting photos. The agency’s AI tools scan these public feeds for unintentional intelligence: a photo of a suspicious person in a background, a video showing a breach in a fence, or a post mentioning a “man on a roof.” In this way, the agency turns the entire crowd into a decentralized sensor network, using the public’s own digital activity to harden the “protective bubble.”
The Limit of the Digital Shield
The greatest challenge for the agency is the shift toward end-to-end encrypted messaging among protest organizers. When a “flash mob” coordinates in private Signal or Telegram groups, the agency’s OSINT tools go dark. This forces the agency back into “physical-only” mode—relying on high-visibility patrols and aerial surveillance (drones and helicopters) to detect the crowd. This “informational blindness” increases the risk of a “Butler-style” surprise, as the agency can no longer “pre-empt” the threat in the digital domain.
The Secret Service uses predictive analytics to transform the chaos of a live political rally into a manageable, data-driven environment. Under Alliance Theory, this is the agency’s attempt to automate the validation of physical sovereignty. By predicting where a crowd might surge or where a threat might emerge, the agency maintains its monopoly on the “inner circle” even as the scale of public events grows.
Behavioral Modeling and “Agent-Based” Simulation
The agency’s National Threat Assessment Center (NTAC) partners with organizations like the DHS Science and Technology Directorate to run “agent-based” models. These are computer simulations that treat every person in a crowd as an “agent” with specific behavioral rules. By running thousands of simulations before an event, the agency can predict:
Crowd Crush Points: Where the physical density of the crowd becomes dangerous to the protectee and the public.
Evacuation Dynamics: How a crowd will react to a “mixed-modality” attack, such as a bombing followed by an active shooter.
Security Gaps: Which “lines of sight” are most likely to be exploited by a lone actor based on historical movement patterns.
This modeling allows the Secret Service to design the physical “geometry” of a rally—placing barriers and exits—not just by instinct, but by statistical probability.
LiDAR and the “Digital Twin” of the Venue
For high-risk events, the Secret Service uses LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) to create a “digital twin” of the venue. This is a photorealistic, 3D navigable reconstruction of the environment accurate to the millimeter.
The Ballistic Analysis: Analysts use this 3D model to calculate every possible sniper angle and “high-ground” vulnerability.
Virtual Advance Work: This allows the agency to perform “virtual site surveys” weeks before the event, identifying “choke points” and “blind spots” that would be invisible to the naked eye.
By mastering the digital version of the site, the agency ensures that the physical alliance with local police is built on a foundation of absolute spatial certainty.
The “Predictive” vs. “Reactive” Shift
The agency is moving from a “reactive” law enforcement model to a “proactive” behavioral model. This is called Behavioral Threat Assessment and Management (BTAM).
Identifying the “Pathway”: Predictive analytics flag individuals who show an escalating cluster of “assessment themes”—such as domestic violence history combined with recent weapon acquisition or target fixation.
The “Friction” Strategy: If the model flags a high-risk individual, the agency doesn’t just wait for them to show up. They might engage in “disruption interviews” or coordinate with local police to monitor the individual’s travel, creating enough friction to break the “pathway to violence” before it reaches the rally perimeter.
The 2026 AI Infrastructure
As of early 2026, the Secret Service has integrated “Computer Vision” AI into its live camera feeds at major events. This technology can automatically detect “anomalous behavior”—such as someone running against the flow of the crowd, a bag left unattended, or a person lingering in a “restricted zone.” This acts as a force multiplier for the agents on the ground. It ensures that the “technical-bureaucratic firewall” is always active, even when human attention fluctuates during a long, high-heat rally.
The Limit of Prediction: The “Black Swan” Crowd
The greatest risk to this predictive model is the spontaneous, un-modeled event. Predictive analytics rely on historical data; they struggle with new tactics or “black swan” scenarios that haven’t been simulated. If a crowd behaves in a way that defies the model—such as a coordinated “digital-to-physical” swarm that the AI hasn’t seen before—the agency’s “predictive shield” can fail. This is why the agency still relies on the “heroic effort” of individual agents to act as the final, non-computational safety net.
Assassination isn’t just murder; it’s a direct attack on regime stability by bypassing elite-controlled power-transfer mechanisms (elections, legal processes). The agency manages proximity as social capital, controls physical perimeters, and performs rituals (motorcades, site surveys) that sacralize leaders while signaling competence to allies (White House, campaigns, locals, intelligence community).Key extensions in the text:Vertical alliances with locals create temporary “pop-up” coalitions for events, trading prestige for manpower—but friction (e.g., resource strain, comms gaps) risks porosity, as in Butler.
Zero-failure culture as binary legitimacy: invisible success, catastrophic failure erodes elite trust and raises participation costs for leaders.
Insider risks (“Praetorian Guard” problem) and secrecy needs (e.g., deleted texts) balance protection with non-leakage to the Executive.
Modern adaptations — Dark Web monitoring for “dossier-market” precursors, OSINT/social media as perimeter sensors, AI-driven predictive analytics (agent-based simulations, LiDAR digital twins, computer vision), behavioral threat assessment (BTAM) to disrupt pathways.
Limits — Encrypted comms blind digital tools; black swans defy models; mission creep dilutes resources across expanding protectees.
This builds a coherent structural view: the Service is a high-stakes infrastructure provider for the political class, optimizing for physical sovereignty via short-term alliances, rituals, and tech layers—yet vulnerable to coordination failures, atrophy from monopoly status, and evolving threats (drones, swarms).Updates from Post-Butler Developments (as of early 2026)The July 13, 2024, Butler attempt remains the defining stress test, confirming many of Leonnig’s “Zero Fail” themes (outdated tech, spotty training, silos, mission creep) and Alliance Theory predictions (vertical alliance friction, reputational signaling via sacrifices/resignations).
Key confirmed failures (from GAO report released July 2025 via Sen. Grassley, congressional task forces, DHS Independent Review Panel, Senate/House reports):
Classified threat intel received 10 days prior not shared with field agents or locals (no process for non-imminent threats).
Pervasive comms breakdowns (split command posts, radio incompatibilities, cell reliance in dead zones).
Line-of-sight vulnerabilities (AGR building/roof unsecured despite awareness).
Inexperienced advance personnel in high-risk roles; unclear responsibility delineation.
Counter-drone/tech gaps; resource misallocation despite known risks.
These weren’t isolated; they stemmed from systemic issues like corrosive “do more with less” culture, lack of ownership, and poor continuous improvement.Reforms implemented (per USSS one-year update July 2025 and ongoing reporting):21 of 46 congressional recommendations actioned (e.g., clearer accountability lines, improved local info-sharing policies, revised advance/comms procedures).
New Aviation and Airspace Security division for aerial monitoring.
Mobile command vehicles pre-positioned; consolidated ops plans; better counter-drone training/reliability.
Workforce boosts (FY2026 request ~$3.5B, +444 positions); increased applicants.
Disciplinary actions: 6 personnel suspended (10–42 days without pay); leadership churn (Cheatle resignation, Rowe interim, Curran/Quinn directors).
Emphasis on proactive threat sharing, unified command, and tech integration.
However, patterns persist:Churn ≠ deep reform; oversight politicized/obstructed in places.
Mission creep worsening (expanded protectees, complex threats).
Reviews note resource strain not sole cause—planning/competence gaps central.
2025 Strategic Plan prioritizes integrated ops against interconnected threats, leader/financial protection, NTAC threat assessment expansion.
Current priorities (from 2025 Strategic Plan and quarterly updates):
Protection as top mission: leaders, candidates, dignitaries, NSSEs; enhanced postures near sites (Feb 2026 alerts).
Evolving threats: foreign/state-backed (e.g., Iran plots), lone actors, cyber/financial crimes tied to protection.
Integration: better partner coordination, tech modernization, continuous vetting.
Butler exposed coalition synchronization failures (info asymmetry, status conflicts with locals). Reforms signal loyalty to elite allies (Congress, Executive) via accountability rituals and procedural tweaks, but monopoly + mission expansion risks ongoing decay. The Service’s “blood-bond” human-shield doctrine and predictive tech aim to automate sovereignty validation, yet black swans (unmodeled swarms, insider erosion) remain structural threats.
Regime continuity via physical monopoly. Butler proved the bubble can leak when alliances fray—reforms patch, but don’t eliminate the tension between zero-fail ideal and real-world coalition messiness. If anything, 2025–2026 updates reinforce that the Service’s legitimacy hinges on visible competence signaling amid rising demands and tech asymmetries.
