I am dipping my toe here because some of the opinions shared seem to resonate with thoughts that have formed in my head long time ago.
It is just my point of view. It will, however, clash with what I think RFC had in mind when he wrote the books. It is going to look like I am criticising The Master - Heaven forbid
- I am not and have not any intention to do so. I am in no way saying his POV is wrong, or that I don't accept it as a legitimate one - I do accept it as that. I do not regard his judgement as flawed. I am simply finding myself in somewhat of a disagreement and am sharing my view of what a character/characters/ with the qualities described in the books should have thought or done. My goal is to discuss some of these differences and possibly find out if and why there is a difference at all, so please don't take offence or put in my mouth /so to speak
/ words I did not mean.
Just sharing my POV.
Also, I will not post quotes as I'm too lazy to pick them up from several posts
1)Concerning Erewhon.
They were absolutely in the right to break from the Manty alliance after being badly mistreated.
They were absolutetly in the right to seek closer connection with Haven.
They were absolutely in the Wrong when they shared classified tech
they did not develop on their own but were given by a former ally with a third party that was recently
in an active state of war with said ally/and with them/, which war
had not /at the time of the tech sharing/ ended in an acceptable manner. It might have been OK by their honor code. It might even have been a /barely/ acceptable faux pas from Manticore's POV, considering the actions of Manticore's own government at the time.
To me,personally, that action - the tech sharing - was a betrayal of the entire Manticore alliance. A harsh word, I know, but I just can't justify such an action at that time. No matter how much the Erewhonese believed the Haven government had changed, they gave classified, possibly field leveling technology to a country with a new, not very stable political system, a tradition of more than a century of military/conquest solutions to internal problems, a country that under one previous government started a massive interstellar war without a declaration of war, under the next government did not even think to acknowledge it was in the wrong and under the current /at the time/ still had not acknowedged any of the above.
In my eyes, Erewhon acted /in the particular instanse of tech sharing/ as a spoiled, offended child totally out of proportion to the offence. I am perfectly aware that Erewhon had no idea Haven was going to resume the war - but they had no right or excuse to presume such a possibility
could not exist at all.
By entering a
mutual defence treaty with Haven at a time when the only probable /I am not saying
very probable, but
at all probable/ invader anyone in the region could imagine was the side they were entering the treaty
with and
specifically by giving that side possibly field levelling tech - well... - they basically stabbed their previous allies /all of them/ in the back. Had they limited themselves with a different kind of treaty or even with a mutual defence treaty without the tech sharing - I could understand and accept that. The way they did it - nope , sorry.
Which brings us to:
2) Concerning Haven.
Nowhere in the books do I see the Pritchart government /or even a particular member of it - or of the entire Haven political scene/ acknowledge
and take into consideration when making political and diplomatical decisions the following facts:
a)It was
Haven that
-started the war - under the Harris government - /to solve internal problems, without provocation or the decency of a declaration of war/,
-did not after the Piere coup admit it was in the wrong or make any attempts to end hostilities - instead used the war to solve internal problems - again /and even further fueled the animosity of its own population towards Manticore/
-did not after the Theisman coup acknowledge the former two points and continued to fuel - or at least did not take any steps to cool down the aforementioned animosity towards Manticore
b)it was
Manticore that /for whatever reasons/:
- having the unquestioned capability to utterly destroy Haven both militarily and economically,
chose not to do so but to pursue diplomatic resolution instead
- having the total and absolute moral high ground after being attacked without provocation or a declaration of war,
chose not to anihilate Haven as a political entity, but to seek a peacefull resolution instead
Whatever the failings of the High Ridge government,
from the perspective of Haven it is that particular government's "fault" that the Republic of Haven
exist at all in any recognizable form.
If not for that government's decision to end hostilities /for whatever reasons it was made/
- there would possibly not have been a Theisman coup at all or at least not in that precise format and with that precize result
- the Haven fleet would have been destroyed, captured or running far away
- The Haven system /along with other more important systems/ would have been occupied
- the Republic of Haven would at present most probably not be in existence in any recognizable form or under any similar name.
- The Manticoran Alliance would be in the right /morally for sure, not exactly sure about interastellar law/ to end the existence of the Haven political entity in its previous form as a multisystem entity - due to that entity's proven record of unprovoked interstellar conquest.
If Manticore /of the High Ridge govt./ seem from the Haven POV to be looking down on them, well ... they have the right, if for totally different reasons than they think they have it.
The Havenites, instead of feeling offended, should have looked themselves in the mirror and admited it was
their star nation's fault thingwere the way they were, no matter which government made the decisions.
If they felt they could claim responsibility for the multitude of star systems of the late PRH -
most of which the PRH conquered at one time or another - including the ones currently(at the time of the negotiations) occupied by Manticore, then they should have been so polite as to accept the responsibility of the same PRH for the war and tried a bit harder not to bloody start another one - for whatever reason, legitimate or no.
What buggs me is that characters I like as people - Theisman, Tourville, Pritchard and a bunch of others - wanted /some of them passionately/ to punch back at Manticore for "kicking their ass"
without clearly acknowledging that the same Manticore had all the reasons in the world and all the moral right it wanted or needed for the ass-kicking administered.
Another thing that buggs me is that Pritchard - and Theisman - made preparations for resuming hostilities
before the diplomatic papers controversy (which at least gave them some legitimate(in my POV) reason to do so), and made these preparations
with the explicit preparedness to undertake them exactly the way the old PRH had - without a formal declaration of war. They never tried to cool down the /absolutely unjustified/ animosity of the Haven population towards Manticore, never stopped to think that they were acting /or at least were going to be seen as acting - in the eyes of external observers/, albeit with more justification, exactly like their predessesors - seeking external solutions to internal problems, laying the price to be paid for saving their star nation on another star nation that had already suffered huge losses from a war started for similar reasons.
In short - Pritchard and her govt. never accepted the responsibility of their star nation for the war, never acknowledged publicly, to their own people, that Haven was in the wrong and Manticore was not the evil enemy these people were made to believe in the past. That way they created a situation where the public opinion in their country made it extremely difficult not to resort to military solution when the state of negotiations stopped being usefull to them. I can remember times when that public opinion was a serious factor in their decision-making process, but I cannot remember any of them acknowledging that it was a mistake not taking any measures to change it and to cool down on the hatred for manticorans clearly present in Haven.
Oh, yeah -the state of war was very usefull for them indeed. The continuing state of war with Manticore made it possible /or at least much, much easier/ to secretly divert budget funds to Bolthole without notifying too many people and thus creating many possible leak sources. The ongoing civil war did not in the least create the need for a secret naval buildup intended to counter not the existing internal enemies, but the possible external one. I am not saying it was not their duty to defend their star nation by any means possible, but they were never close to ready to accept a penalty in proportion for the actual guilt their nation bore for the war. They thought and acted as the /representatives of the/ star nation
being attacked/invaded, not
the one that started all the bloodshed.
I don't insist that such a change/addition in their thinking could or should have lead to different results - I don't really think that any results much different from the ones described in the books are any likely at all. However, it makes it more difficult for me to accept these characters as the honest and honorable persons they are intended to be.
I can accept that all these people are not perfect, that they can and will make mistakes, and that circumstances beyond their control will have a great effect ot the world they live in. The way I see it though,
some of these mistakes were avoidable, and the actions that could have avoided them
should at least have been taken into consideration - in accordance with the way of thinking these characters are described as having. More precisely, the one flaw I never see described /if at all perceived/ as such is the inability to take responsibility for the historical record and actions of one's star nation
in their entirety. Remember when, after the assasinatons on Old Earth and Torch, Kevin Usher informed the cabinet that Haven had assasinated not only Cromarty, Gold Peak and the others at Grayson, but also King Roger III? Well, at that point all these people could somehow perceive that they can be seen as "the hexapuma that only changes its spots" - if not with that much of a justification for that particular incidents, while previously not being able to perceive that they - as a government and a nation - were held responsible /and in my opinion
were in fact responsible as a descendant government/ for all the results of the last war - with a lot more justification.
Again, I am not judging, but simply stating my POV. Please take that in mind when responding, and let us discuss and see if and where /and why/ I am wrong in my observations and thoughts, or where I am missing something.