ThinksMarkedly wrote:Jonathan_S wrote:Remember that at this point, and even somewhat later such as at 4th Yeltsin, RD were short ranged and very difficult to get through the defenses of an alert fleet. (Because they were so short ranged that against a maneuvering opponent you had to launch them so late that the opponent would see that launch (making it very hard for them to hide)
But it's probably worth the cost of a few of them to try and see something. There's no downside to this, aside from the actual cost.
That said, he may have done it and those drones were detected and shot down, providing him no new useful intel. So he had no option than to continue with the intel he had.
So if White Haven's extra ships had been close enough to the visible portion of his fleet Parnell would have had to send enough RDs to basically overwhelm White Haven's point defenses to get some close enough to pick up the extra hidden ships. And so it seems people generally didn't bother. Despite Honor's initial unorthodox messy formation at 4th Yeltsin Admiral Thurstin didn't bother to expend them to confirm what he was seeing.
I don't think Thurstin could be counted as a good flag officer, though. The Legislaturalist officer corps may have had a lot of politically-connected incompetent fools (like the SLN), but they had actually used their ships (unlike the SLN) so Parnell would have known more or less who the incompetent fools were. After the purge, a lot of untried mid-level officers were promoted to flag rank without any experience.
Plus, at this point, those flag officers were under the threat of "succeed or die."
So maybe by even that point in the war Admirals were simply not in the habit of checking their route of advance, or the enemy formations, with RDs...
At this point in time, they actually used destroyers for scouts. Destroyers are faster than fleet formation, but not by much. Not enough to pass a warning to avoid engagement, even if the destroyer could get into enough range to get the intel.
In any case, I'm going to double down on "Parnell was not a good strategian". We had a thread about whether he was picking from the Noveau Paris School of Convoluted War-fighting Planning (which probably co-hosted the Imperial Stoormtrooper Shooting Academy).
Multiple characters in the book comment on how good of a tactician Parnell was at Third Yeltsin. Honor herself seems to share that opinion when she's commanding the ATC - she has Kriangsak elaborate further on Third Yeltsin to Abigail Hearns and others.
On McQueen's competence: it's also commented that she's not quite White Haven's equal in strategy and tactics but she's very close. The PN is vast and in that officer corps there were/are many good thinkers. None can compare to Honor but she's got the massive advantage of being the title character and her true superpower is luck. RFC alludes to this in the book multiple times where in many instances Honor puts her thumb on the scale but space combat and hits are random. He's shown us many other Admirals/Captains - the Kellet/Hall training Diamato for example - who are unlucky and die.
A short list of situations Honor survives mostly due to luck (writing)
- HMS Fearless (CL) doesn't take a serious hit to the bridge
- HMS Fearless (CA) lives because McKeon decides to go active on Masadan LACs
- HMS Fearless (CA) doesn't have to fight a capably crewed Saladin
- HMS Nike's Flag bridge hit, main bridge is not
- HMS Wayfarer in the rift where most of the bridge crew dies
- HMS Prince Adrian engagement
- Only seriously wounded in escape from Tepes
- Timing of arrival of Statesec warships to allow Honor to create Elysian space navy to devise plan to win Battle of Cerberus
- 8th fleet not sitting on junction to be mousetrapped by RHN (RFC Himself noted this is his unplanned intervention)
She's literally Edward Saganami but lucky.