Roguevictory wrote: Mitchell, Esq. wrote:Why about Zilwicki's 'private security company'?
He's a merc outfit, without question... one that is operating on Manticore without trouble.
Mercenaries are not always bad to have around. Retired service people may have skills that are needed by the government for special jobs which can't be handled by uniformed services or other agencies in government.
Perhaps one want to support a government which is friendly... but you don't want to do so officially.
No problem. Find retired or separated people with the skills you need... and they go on 'vacation' to parts unknown for a year or two.
SWM wrote:I thought RFC made it clear that Manticore doesn't have a problem with mercenaries as such. It doesn't use them itself, and avoids situations where it would have to work with them, but does not prevent private companies from hiring mercenaries or security services, and does not prevent citizens from being hired as mercenaries or security services.
It doesn't seem to mind them if they are helping it though, see Honor's middy cruise captain who ran an armed cargo company that supplied intel to ONI. I wonder what happened to him after War of Honor?
How does Bachfish's armed ship constitute a "mercenary" force? His ships were armed solely for self-protection, which has been --- and still is --- a recognized right for vessels plying the high seas. Now, most present day ports are likely to throw a hissy fit and stiffly regulate (or more probablky probably exclude) any armed merchantmen entering their waters, but up until the very late 19th century, it was not at all uncommon for private vessels operating in uncertain waters to be armed. The current situation in which ships aren't even sufficiently well-armed to resist teenagers in speedboats off Somalia is totally out of step with the vast majority of maritime history. This may or may not be a good thing in our own experience, but if Bachfish's armament makes
him a mercenary, then Klaus Hauptman is also a mercenary for having armed his passenger liners for self-defense in Silesia.
The definition some people are using for what constitutes a "mercenary force" is way, way,
way too broad, in my opinion, in historical terms. And it is certainly enormously broader than anyone in the Honorverse would use.