cthia wrote:So you're saying I'm a lone-wolf, again. As in many other threads where I turned out to be correct. But, I agree that my notions may be a wash here. There are just too many unknowns.
But it appears to be a given that ships cannot be targeted thru the WH. Whether that can be exploited by an invisible enemy? Perhaps not. But in absence of any other tactic to assault a WH - that might actually work - and there aren't any others ...
The problem is that this strategy of yours relies on unproven assumptions and an ideal condition. It is not balanced at all, because there's very good probability that the exchange is actually one LD for a couple of LACs.
First of all, it rests on two unproven assumptions. First, that such "nest" exists. There's nothing in the books to prove that they do or don't, so it's a complete unknown. As others have explained time and again, any place inside the Junction volume is within graser range of any of the dozens of forts. So even if a nest that impedes Ghost Rider recons and missiles can exist, we know for a fact it does not stop energy weapons.
The second assumption is that the LD can get into position undetected. This is a weak assumption. All we know is that the MAN's own efforts couldn't detect a spider ship (presumably a Shark, not an LD) at one-light second range. That doesn't tell us how such a ship would fare against RMN sensors. It doesn't tell us how a bigger ship would fare against RMN sensors. And most importantly, it doesn't tell us how that would fare against multiple overlapping sensor nets, since any point inside the Junction is going to be within 1 light-second of a dozen forts or more, plus whatever other ships and scanning platforms there may be. This region is a nightmare of traffic, so both the RMN and ACS will have a lot of sensing platforms. And note that this is both insertion and the wait: the ship must find a path to get into position without being detected, then lie in wait for at least multiple hours. I find that insertion is actually the biggest problem: since there are concentric shells of forts, this ship would by necessity pass much closer than one light-second to a few of them.
And whether the MAN thinks their stealth tech is good enough, they'd be lunatics to try without proving that it is so. That means there ought to have been at least one engagement prior to this (hopefully with the RMN ship never returning home to tell the story).
The other half of the problem is "getting half of Eight Fleet." Even if Eighth hasn't been reinforced, that's 64 ships and the most a mass transit can accommodate is 25. That's less than half.
But rounding aside, your strategy implies triggering a mass transit. That will only happen in a Case Zulu, which means ALL of the defenders on the hither side of the Junction will be on high alert. So that makes the detection even more difficult. Not only will there be dozens of overlapping sensor nets of the forts and their fields of fire, by design of the operation 60% of Eighth Fleet will have transited and will actually very close by this LD.
This strategy also depends on the RMN cooperating. Like counting cards in Blackjack, you may be able to predict when a mass transit is likely (when 60% of Eighth has transited). But what if they don't mass-transit, but instead keep coming one by one? There's no mass attack. Worse, what happens if there's another fleet that happened to be closer by in Gregor or Basilisk or Lynx and begins transiting too? Now not only do you not have a mass transit, you have an massive increase of ships scanning around the Junction.
I find it doubtful that even the Inner Onion would throw away 12 million tonnes of metal and 8 to 10 thousand spacers for a single person. Even if they were that obsessed, that again depends on Honor cooperating. What if she is not aboard her flagship at the time? What if she or her flagship were in Manticore for consultation with the Admiralty? In fact, she's not going to be a fleet CO any more, she's too senior for that. So who's important enough besides Honor to be worth one LD and 10k MAN spacers? And finally, how do you know which ship this person is in?
The final nail in the coffin for this is that there are better techniques. Instead of leaving a massive ship behind, a Silver Bullet could do the trick as easily. It can fall overboard from a nearly-legitimate freighter, without requiring a 3-month long insertion, and take up position. It's much smaller, so it has less of a chance of being detected. It's also much cheaper.
So, summary: this plan rests on unprovable assumptions by us, quite likely impossible insertion, with a high risk and low reward ratio, and with better alternatives. I admire you for dreaming it up and defending it, but it's not going to happen. Other Sci-Fi authors may be careless enough to toss out the rationality of their characters, but David is usually careful enough to catch this kind of stuff and think it through (yes, he makes mistakes, but usually not with this shot full of holes).
That said, I have to reiterate that I currently don't see how the LDs can achieve superiority over a battlefield. They may be good stealth platforms, but not fighting ones. It's like training a battalion of snipers and bringing them to the battlefield: the concentration is lopsided. At best, I see them like submarines deploying mines and SEAL teams forward, but never themselves engaging the enemy. With that I mean to say that I'm equally sure that RFC is holding details of their operation back and will only reveal to us in a book or two, because right now
those ships make no sense.