kzt wrote:You know why big battles were indecisive? It's because if you roll your ship energy weapons can't hit you. The odds are you are not going to get really close without being detected. And if you are moving fast you are not coming back for a while, during which period you get to test your missile defenses. Oh, and lastly, remember what happened at BoM when shrikes made a high speed pass through a SD fleet? If not I'll remind you. They took 95% casualties and did no damage to the SDs.
That's true - but the enemy in question - the Havenites - enjoyed some advantages the SLN lacks. 1st and foremost: The Havenites knew about the Shrikes and Ferrets and what they are able to do - The Sollies don't. They know, there are new LACs, but (aside from the more or less limited experience they made in the 2nd BoM) they don't know what they can and cannot do.
2nd - Because of reason 1, the Sollies don't have a doctrine of how to fight against modern LACs. Their energy weapons are designed to fight against hypercapable warships - big vessels with (compared to LACs) slow acceleration and even slower velocities. And their PDLC (so far as they have laserclusters at all) don't have the range for a succesfull fight against LACs (afaik, the PDLCs of a Sag-C CA like Hexapuma have a range of about 30.000 km (1) - and somehow I doubt that the PDLCs even of a Manty SD(P), much less a Sollie SD, have so much more range)
3rd) Even after all the losses, the SLN has suffered - it is still not on a warfooting mindset. Not really. They just begin to accept (kicking and screeming all the way) that "something has to be done now", but the mountain of things that "have to be done now" is so huge, that the development of a new doctrine (and the accompanying hard- and software to set it in effect) against LAC-attacks is definitely not one of the highest urgency. That may change, after some SDs are critically damaged or even lost against LACs ... but not for the forseeable future.
(1) - cf Shadow of Saganami, the Chapter with Ragnhild Pavletics death.