Inquisition (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine)

"Inquisition" is the 142nd episode of the television series Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. It is the 18th episode of the sixth season. This episode introduces Starfleet's secretive intelligence agency, Section 31, which would go on to be featured in future Star Trek television series and films.

"Inquisition"
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode
Episode no.Season 6
Episode 18
Directed byMichael Dorn
Written byBradley Thompson
David Weddle
Featured musicDennis McCarthy
Production code542
Original air dateApril 8, 1998 (1998-04-08)
Guest appearance(s)

Set in the 24th century, Deep Space Nine follows the adventures of the crew of the fictional space station Deep Space Nine, which lies adjacent to a wormhole connecting the Alpha and Gamma Quadrants of the galaxy. The later seasons of the series follow a war between the United Federation of Planets and the Dominion, a hostile empire from the Gamma Quadrant. In this episode, Deep Space Nine's chief medical officer Dr. Julian Bashir is accused of being a spy for the Dominion; the accusations turn out to be a tool to recruit Bashir to join Section 31.

Broadcast on April 8, 1998 on television, it received Nielsen ratings of 4.7 points corresponding to about 4.6 million viewers.[1]

Plot

Late one evening, Dr. Bashir treats Chief O'Brien's dislocated shoulder. The next morning, Deep Space Nine is visited by Luther Sloan, an agent from Starfleet Internal Affairs. Sloan suspects that one of DS9's senior staff is a Dominion spy; he confines them to quarters and tells them to await interrogation. At Bashir's interview, Sloan treats him cordially while asking a few light questions. Later, O'Brien tells Bashir that his own interrogation with Sloan lasted hours and focused entirely on Bashir.

Bashir is brought back to the now hostile Sloan, who points out events from Bashir's past that seem to indicate disloyalty or dishonesty. Sloan proposes that, when Bashir was imprisoned by the Dominion the previous year, he was persuaded to become a Dominion spy but repress his memories of the choice, allowing him to truly believe he was a loyal Starfleet officer. Bashir refuses to accept Sloan's theory, but Sloan has him imprisoned in a holding cell. Captain Sisko attends Bashir's next interrogation, pointing out holes in Sloan's arguments, but later privately suggests to Bashir that Sloan's theories are plausible.

The next day, Bashir is suddenly beamed to a Dominion ship, where he is greeted warmly by the Dominion representative Weyoun. Weyoun tells Bashir he made a moral choice to help the Dominion in order to end the war quickly. Bashir, wondering why Weyoun and Sloan are trying to convince him of the same thing, concludes that Sloan himself is the traitor.

Bashir is rescued by the DS9 crew, but uncharacteristically, the entire crew refuses to listen to his insistence that he is innocent. Desperate, Bashir grabs O'Brien, who pulls his arm away. Bashir, suspicious that O'Brien's injury has apparently healed already, tricks him into revealing he is unaware of the cause of the injury. Bashir realizes the entire scenario isn't real—he has been in a holodeck simulation since the previous morning.

Sloan ends the simulation and informs Bashir that his loyalty was being tested. Sloan explains that he is a member of Section 31, a secretive autonomous intelligence agency. Bashir questions the legality and ethics of the operation, but Sloan justifies their actions as necessary to protect the Federation. He attempts to recruit Bashir, but Bashir refuses and threatens to expose them.

Back on DS9, Sisko reports that Starfleet Command neither confirms nor denies Section 31's existence. He predicts that Sloan will try to recruit Bashir again, and orders him to accept, so they can find out more.

Reception

In 2015, Geek.com recommended this episode as "essential watching" for their abbreviated Star Trek: Deep Space Nine binge-watching guide.[2]

Writing for Tor.com, Keith DeCandido described William Sadler's performance as Sloan as "magnificent".[3]

"Inquisition" is of several espionage stories featured in the later seasons of Deep Space Nine.,[4] stemming from a desire to add greater moral ambiguity to the fictional universe of Star Trek.[5]

In 2016, The Hollywood Reporter ranked "Inquisition" as the 12th best of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine.[6] They rated the episode the 49th best episode of all Star Trek episodes to-date.[7]

In 2018, Nerdist ranked this episode the 12th most essential episode of the series.[8]

References

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