It's completely find and good to spend months and years looking at all of the details and what could have been done differently and what should be done differently going forward.
But one thing that gets lost in most of these inquiries is the fact that at the end of the day these "500 core participants" will arrive at a conclusion, after months of testimony and consultation and research and testing, of what was done wrong and then people will demand that those that didn't do it right be held accountable for not doing so. That's a horrible bar to set. These "core participants" should be given the same amount of time (in this case about two hours), under similar circumstances and with the same amount of knowledge and with the same stress and pressure associated with the overall situation they were facing, to conclude definitively that the actions taken by those on the scene that had to actually make the decision at the time were wrong.
