No, Haven't doesn't appear to have much of a fleet train. Haven's navy, prior to the first war, was optimized around:Sigs wrote:Presumably the RHN has some form of a fleet train and more importantly they get to choose the time and place of the war so they can set up advance bases in one of the thousands of unoccupied out of the way systems. BB's that take damage are either sent home or if they cannot make it home are scuttled all without costing the RHN all that much in combat power.
Can you tell me what a BB can do to fight insurrections that a cruiser cannot do? If a system has the shipyard to be able to build warships of its own it likely will have a sizeable fleet presence, if it doesn't have the ability then a destroyer or two along with a dozen old style LAC's will do the trick just fine.
1) Deterring internal insurrection (yeah, you don't need one to fight an insurrection; loyal ground troops plus even a DD providing orbital bombardment is plenty. But the visible proof that the iron boot is hovering over your head to drop outsized marine detachments and fire from the sky helps remind restless planets that it isn't worth causing a fuss. (Plus being a warship its harder to infiltrate saboteurs the way a groundside army base might be vulnerable to)
2) Carefully planned short range overwhelming lunges.
So they just didn't need much of a fleet train because they only fought wars of choice, and only from nearby bases. Therefore they didn't need to send supplies, ammo, repair ships, etc. after the fleet to keep it supplied and operational far from home because the fleet would stock up, overwhelm their target, and then mostly return to base. The supplies, repair capabilities, ammo, could just stay at their forward bases.
(This is kind of like assuming France, because they have a modern aircraft carrier and thus are a pretty significant navy, must have a decent fleet train. Not really, they don't operate far enough from, or long enough away, from their ports to need one -- so, unlike the modern RN, they really haven't invested in any expeditionary capability and would be hard pressed to sustain an operation in, say, the Pacific or South Atlantic without support from allied bases or fleet trains)