
WACO: THE RULES OF ENGAGEMENT
3 & 1/2 Stars
(Not rated)
A documentary directed and edited by William Gazecki.
Running time: 135 minutes.
No MPAA rating (scenes of violence and corpses;
unsuitable for younger viewers).
By Roger Ebert
Like many news-drenched Americans, I paid only
casual attention to the standoff at Waco, Texas, between the Branch Davidians
and two agencies of the federal government. I came away with the vague
impression that the ``cult,'' as it was always styled, was a group of
gun-toting crackpots, that they killed several U.S. agents, refused to
negotiate and finally shot themselves and burned down their ``compound''
after the feds tried to end the siege peacefully with tear gas.
Watching William Gazecki's remarkable documentary ``Waco: The Rules of
Engagement,'' I am more inclined to use the words ``religion'' than ``cult,''
and ``church center'' than ``compound.'' Yes, the Branch Davidians had
some strange beliefs, but no weirder than those held by many other religions.
And it is pretty clear, on the basis of this film, that the original raid
was staged as a publicity stunt, and the final raid was a government riot--a
tragedy caused by uniformed boys with toys.
Of course I am aware that ``Waco'' argues its point of view, and that
there is no doubt another case to be made. What is remarkable, watching
the film, is to realize that the federal case has not been made. Evidence
has been ``lost,'' files and reports have ``disappeared,'' tapes have
been returned blank, participants have not testified and the ``crime scene,''
as a Texas Ranger indignantly testifies, was not preserved for investigation,
but razed to the ground by the FBI--presumably to destroy evidence.
The film is persuasive because:
1.
It presents testimony from both sides, and shies away from cheap shots.
We feel we are seeing a fair attempt to deal with facts.
2.
Those who attack the government are not simply lawyers for the Branch
Davidians or muckraking authors (although they are represented) but also
solid middle-American types like the county sheriff, the district Texas
Rangers, the FBI photographer on the scene, and the man who developed
and patented some of the equipment used by the FBI itself to film devastating
footage that appears to show its agents firing into the buildings--even
though the FBI insists it did not fire a single shot.
3.
The eyes of the witnesses. We all have built-in truth detectors, and although
it is certainly possible for us to be deceived, there is a human instinct
that is hard to fool. Those who argue against the government in this film
seem to be telling the truth, and their eyes seem to reflect inner visions
of what they believe happened, or saw happen. Most of the government defenders,
including an FBI spokesman and Attorney General Janet Reno, seem to be
following rehearsed scripts and repeating cant phrases. Reno comes across
particularly badly: Either she was misled by the FBI and her aides, or
she was completely out of touch with what was happening.
If the film is to be believed, the Branch Davidians
were a harmless if controversial group of religious zealots, their beliefs
stretching back many decades, who were singled out for attention by the
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms for offenses, real or contrived,
involving the possession of firearms--which is far from illegal in Texas.
The ATF hoped by raiding the group to repair its tarnished image. And
when four of its agents, and several Davidians, were killed in a misguided
raid, they played cover-up and turned the case over to the FBI, which
mishandled it even more spectacularly.
What is clear, no matter which side you believe, is that during the final
deadly FBI raid on the buildings, a toxic and flammable gas was pumped
into the compound even though women and children were inside. ``Tear gas''
sounds innocent, but this type of gas could undergo a chemical transformation
into cyanide, and there is a pitiful shot of an 8-year-old child's body
bent double, backward, by the muscular contractions caused by cyanide.
What comes through strongly is the sense that the attackers were ``boys
with toys.'' The film says many of the troops were thrilled to get their
hands on real tanks. Some of the law-enforcement types were itching to
``stop standing around.'' One SWAT team member boasts he is ``honed to
kill.'' Nancy Sinatra's ``These Boots Are Made for Walking'' was blasted
over loudspeakers to deprive those inside of sleep (the memory of that
harebrained operation must still fill the agents with shame).
When the time came, on April 19, 1993, the agents were apparently ready
to rock 'n' roll. Heat-sensitive films taken by the FBI and interpreted
by experts seem to show FBI agents firing into the compound, firing on
an escape route after the fires were started, and deliberately operating
on the side of the compound hidden from the view of the press. No evidence
is presented that those inside started fires or shot themselves. Although
many dead Davidians were indeed found with gunshot wounds, all of the
bullets and other evidence has been impounded by the FBI.
Whatever happened at Waco, these facts remain: It is not against the law
to hold irregular religious beliefs. It is not illegal to hold and trade
firearms. It is legal to defend your own home against armed assault, if
that assault is illegal. It is impossible to see this film without reflecting
that the federal government, from the top down, treated the Branch Davidians
as if those rights did not apply.
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