n7axw wrote:Dealing with your number 1. We need to be a bit more precise here. The Legislaturists were known for assassination. The Committee was known for assassination. The reborn Republic? Not at all. Now it is understandable that Manticore might be conflating the three, especially at that point. But Honor was capable of making the distinction, iirc. He understood the logic of Haven attacking her, but she also understood the possibility of alternates. Also, Haven's preferred methods in the previous regimes were aircar accidents and pulsers. Nanites? Not so much.
Your number two. Remember that story in Beauty and the Beast? IIRC, it was a Beowulf representative that was being targeted on Old Sol. That's an attack on the representative of a state. I doubt that they were making those sorts of distinctions. If you were in the way and threatening Manpower in some way, you could make their hit list regardless of who you were or who you had represented. Remember that conversation between Bardasano and Detweiler when he asked about he possibility of a hit on either Elizabeth or Prichard? Her response: the security is too good. If it could have been done it would have been done.
Your number three:
What Webster was doing was attacking Manpower. He probably was attacking Haven some, but the emphasis in the text ev is on Manpower. I think that is the clue we are given. Manpower was a lot more on the front burner in the League than Haven in the aftermath of Monica.
Your number four: For me the thing that gives it away is that the individual used was the Havenite ambassador's driver. Come on, surely someone with Haven's skills and sinister reputation could have come up with something a bit less transparent than that??? IIRC that one even got called into question by the Alexander government and they are focused on Haven.
Your number five: The mutual antipathy between Honor and Manpower goes much further than how effective she's been against them. Think of her mother's maiden name: Benton Ramierz y Chow. Think of her brother Jacques and the BSC... Her ancestors: big advocates of the Chartwell Convention... The opportunity to strike against THAT family would have motivated Albrecht at least as much as anything Honor herself might have done. Everybody involved on both sides of that would have been fully aware of the implications including the Alexander government.
From my perspective, Dafmeister, there was more than enough reason to look at Manpower rather than Haven. In fact, taken as a whole, I think that it's compelling.
However, for reasons with I find completely understandable, yes even with which I am sympathetic, Elizabeth was focused on Haven with her suspicions so strong that they constituted tunnel vision. Remember how hard it was to convince Elizabeth to go to the Torch summit? The same was true for the Alexander government as a whole. Without that tunnel vision they would probably have not canceled the Torch summit and they most assuredly would have been seriously considering a broader range of possibilities than they actually did.
Thank you for your post and the courtesy you displayed in laying it out.
Don
Hi Don,
Good points all. I'd reply as follows:
1) I agree that the Republic of Haven didn't have a track record of assasinating people. However, it also didn't have a track record of
not assasinating people. There were only six years between Saint-Just's death and the attack on Honor; that's not enough time to establish much of a track record of anything. Someone predisposed to be suspicious of Haven, such as most Manticorans, could easily believe that Haven had been playing good-guy for the galaxy at large and was now reverting to type when Eighth Fleet started landing some damaging blows.
2) I'd put Beowulf in a special category here, given that they've effectively been at war with Manpower for centuries. I'd also point out that Jacques was an officer of the Biological Survey Corps, which would make him a priority target for an attack on Beowulfan soil.
3) Webster was certainly givin Manpower both barrels, I won't deny that. However, I don't think that's a particularly unusual state of affairs and isn't the sort of thing that, on its own, would be likely to trigger an assasination attempt.
4) This is a very valid point, and it left people in-universe scrambling to find reasons for why Haven would use one of their own people. IIRC, one suggestion was that there were biological requirements for the nanotech which may have forced them to use the driver, while someone else suggested it was a double-bluff, trying to convince the galaxy at large that it must have been someone else because Haven wouldn't be that stupid. None of those arguments were considered to be terribly convincing, but Haven still seemed the only logical suspect.
5) Honor's ancestry is irrelevant to assigning blame for the attack on her, for one simple reason - no-one on Manticore knew that Albrecht Detweiler or the Mesan Alignment even existed at that time, so they couldn't ascribe the attack on Honor to a vendetta on his part. Also, she's hardly going to be the only descendant of the Bentons, Ramirezes and Chous - there are probably hundreds, if not thousands. None of the others are being targeted, so why would Honor?
We need to remember how the characters in the stories have reacted to the revelation of the Alignment's existence. None of them had a clue that it existed or that it was connected to Mesa and Manpower, and the actions it has been undertaking are wildly out of character when compared to Manpower's M.O. Attacks on ambassadors, fleet commanders and peace conferences simply aren't what Manpower does. The Alignment isn't Manpower; Manpower is the stalking horse, a front to focus all the antipathy directed at Mesa onto itself and
away from the Alignment's actual operations. Manpower's support for the terrorist groups in Talbott and the government of Monica are the first hints that the galaxy's view of Manpower is wrong, and it takes time for that idea to penetrate; after centuries of seeing Manpower as an outlaw corporation, everyone has a fixed thought pattern about Manpower and Mesa which they can't shake off in a few weeks or months, especially when they're distracted by a major war.