Loren Pechtel wrote:tlb wrote:She came looking for a fight and got one. She could not run and would never surrender without a shot fired. The only change that I can see worth making would be to save missiles and only blow up Crandall's ship and a couple others, then explain to the new CO that they had no option but surrender.
I don't think that was a viable option. Crandall was coming down their throats and had to be stopped before she got within missile range. The GA also didn't know how effective their missiles would be. While they certainly could have popped Crandall with a targeted attack that would mean a lot of range lost. If the second in command figured it was another bluff (their missiles were deadly but they couldn't throw a lot of them) and pressed on and the more pessimistic estimates of how they would fare were right Crandall's fleet would have been savaged but victorious.
There was at least time to test the waters - two launches,
err lunches. This brings me head-to-head with something I've always wondered about. A missile lock "sweet spot." Henke could have launched two salvo's, staggered. The second salvo launched at the optimum range that would allow time for the effectiveness of the first launch to be digested and new missile locks on surviving targets input into the trailing launch. Is that accomplished now? It would fall more in line with not completely scratching the surface of the capabilities of Apollo.
At any rate, the way I see it, Henke had a responsibility to gain intel on the effectiveness of Waller defenses, to pay it forward. In a way, she could have lost the opportunity to do exactly that, in the same vein that SL COs constantly failed to acquire accurate intel on Manty capabilities. The fact that this was the first encounter with SL SDs, it could have become a serious tactical fail for Henke not to gain that intel in case her shit quickly went into the crapper with no unit detached to ferry back the warning . . .
"They've gotten themselves 'back on balance.' "
The RMN has been there and done that with Haven. Remember when the RHN returned loaded for bear with the "Tripple Ripple?" Intel on the effectiveness of any new SL wrinkles, like Aegis, on Manty ECM was imperative. I thought that's exactly what Henke was alluding too.
If Henke was feeling jumpy, that
staggered launch could have been massive and already enroute if range was a problem. And, of course, she would have had to settle on whether testing the waters was comprised of internal tube launchers.