KNick wrote:Sorry, Rose. As a former sailor I must agree at least in part with Exiled. Sonja committed at least two and possibly three criminal acts with her vote.
First: dereliction of duty. If Young was guilty of the crimes he was charged with, it was her responsibility to see that he suffered the punishment for those crimes. If, for any reason, she felt she could not impose that sentence she should have recused herself. As the charges were specified, if he was guilty of one, he was guilty of all of them. Since she felt he was guilty (she must have in order to propose the solution she did), she should have so voted, from the start.
Second: Conduct unbecoming an Officer. By allowing political pressure to sway her vote, she violated her commissioning oath. In fact, under the strict interpretation of the law, all six were guilty of this charge.
Third (possibly). Conspiracy to commit a crime. If she discussed her decision with anyone, she is guilty of this. However, I do not know if there were any "off screen" discussions. It is implied that there are, but that is unconfirmed in her case.
All of that said, I believe that she has risen above that period of her life, not in spite of but because of, the effects of that decision. She had her nose rubbed in the fact that she was wrong and is doing her best to atone for her mistake.
So? By that logic Honor should have been court-martialed as well; she issued orders that were not hers to give and did it under false pretenses. If we're giving leeway to Honor because of other considerations under the circumstances - that passing command would have scrambled the squadron enough to cause defeat - then we owe Sonja the same consideration.
In addition, if you're going to throw stones at someone for caving to political pressure, it shouldn't be Sonja Hemphill. Jurgens and Lemaitre blatantly voted in a partisan manner despite knowing Young was, because of what he knew at the time, absolutely guilty of cowardice and desertion. White Haven and Kuzak conveniently chose to ignore Honor's irregular actions during the battle and let them slide because of political pressure from the other side. Nobody on that jury was impartial.
In ideal conditions, yes, Sonja should have voted to convict, because we as the readers knew that Young was in the wrong and Honor was in the right. But the military doesn't exist in a vacuum. Had Young been executed, any chance of getting a declaration of war against Haven through Parliament would have been impossible. Sonja knew that. She had her reasons for not wanting Young executed. Were they the most noble of reasons? Not necessarily. But they were her reasons, and she believed in them strongly enough to broker a compromise that would draw fire from both sides and satisfy nobody, because at least it was something, and she wanted him punished.
She didn't recuse herself because she knew that if she did, any chance of punishing Young at all might well go straight out the window. So she took the only visible way out. In hindsight, maybe she wishes she'd made a different choice; we don't know. But she acted in good faith, on the information she had, with the only options she saw available to her, and she made the best of it. This wasn't something Sonja has to redeem herself from. It was the start of her redemption.
Other people on this thread have defended her far more eloquently than I ever could, and I'd ask you to go back and read those posts as well, because she deserves it.
I've never painted her as a saint. But the idea that she acted in her own self-interest or that she faltered under pressure is one I cannot and will not ever believe.