Ah, well, first of all, sorry if I opened Pandora's Box.
That was not my intention.
Let me clarify a few points, since from the answers I get a feeling I may have been misunderstood a little.
For starters, I meant to debate concepts while remaining inside the fictional universe, as it is depicted.
I do realize the Real World is not black&white. Neither is DW's world, for that matter, but it IS a bit idealized in some aspects: it is a fictional world -if extremely detailed and believable - and it serves storytelling purposes, so, how could it be any different?
In our
fictional world, the Peeps *are* very well indeed
the evil aggressors, at least at the start of the narrative arc.
Now of course MOST members of the Peep Navy can only be decent people who have enlisted for valid reason (be it necessity, patriotism or what have you), and they can only be expected to believe in their Navy, fight for their people and follow their orders.
I'm not talking about
them.
I'm talking about those
selected, exalted individuals like Tourville and Theisman that
in the books are depicted as extremely intelligent and insightful. Those individuals are shown time and time again as
perfectly able to recognize the realities in which they operate.
So they know what they are doing.
They know the Peep Navy has been waging wars of aggression for
decades even before it became Manticore's turn, killing free people's defenders to rob their home planets of their assets. They *know* that this is precisely what they're doing.
So, in this context (which is the context
of the books) following orders because of their oaths doesn't really make them valiant officers (imho), just officers that don't have enough moral integrity (again, imho) to outright refuse to have anything to do with such activities.
What would I do in their shoes? Probably the same: I'm no hero either, I'm sure.
But that it's my point. They're just decent, regular people who, at the end of the day, prefer to kill foreigners (preferably soldiers, granted) instead of being killed themselves. The fact that they're decent at their core indeed allows them, when they get the opportunity, to turn things for the better, thus attaining a degree of redemption.
Still everything they do in the starting novels makes them "guilty" at least to some degree.
Honor, on the other hand, is a true hero who always acts for the greater good, and I disagree with those who disagree - sorry.
She is the Example, the greater_than_life hero who ultimately will be instrumental even to shape a grander alliance between divided star nations.
She *is* morally superior to Tourville, Foraker, Theisman and the like.
She'd never do something she
knows to be wrong in the blind pursuit of orders, and she wouldn't follow orders that would make her a plain murderer.
(I will stand corrected if something to that effect happens in Shadow of Freedom, which I haven't read yet, but I seriously doubt that will be the case..).
And her serving under High Ridge is hardly relevant in this issue: she's still defending Manticore after all, and everything "bad" that happens to the Peeps is ultimately something they simply could have avoided by never instigating the conflict in the first place.
That's it, hope I have been clearer this time and that I haven't offended anyone

And let me add that I love those characters for their complexity, their turmoil and ultimately their narrative value: the whole "Peep" arc is indeed fascinating, exhilarating and everything that has been said.
I just disagree with how some of my fellow fans seem to "classify" them.
