Zakharra wrote:You're missing one of the biggest points of the Doctrine. It includes military force at some point if the diplomacy and economic incentives fail.
SWM wrote:SWM, it does in fact imply the use of military force to prevent the League's successor states from becoming big enough to once again threaten the Star Empire's survival.
It doesn't say so in so many words, but the implication is quite clear, I think.
hanuman wrote:You've said this several times, but I don't interpret that text the same way. I do not see any mention of use of military force to keep the successor states small enough. I disagree with your interpretation.
First, the oft-quoted paragraph is only a summation of the "Harrington Doctrine" without the context of the surrounding discussion and concerns. The context pretty much removes any implication of using force after the League is broken into enough small pieces that no single Successor State is big enough to be a problem.
Second, The oft-quoted paragraph delineates a two-part plan for survival of the SEM in the long-term.
Part One: Smash the SLN and Solarian League government Militarily so the League fractures into numerous small successor states. Stop hammering any separatist/secessionist system and protect them from SLN/SL reprisals as long as they are at least neutral. Offer trade and mutual defense treaties and whatever else will turn them from "Neutral" to "Friend."
Part Two: Once the SL is broken and the SLN destroyed then put away the Military and use Diplomacy, Trade, and "Foreign Aid" to keep the Successor States from having any desire to combine into potentially troublesome size.
If the military is used, brandished, or held over someone's head to force concessions, the the Harrington Doctrine will have failed because it is proposed as an alternative to Military Occupation.
The whole point of the Doctrine is to create and maintain a situation where the military is not needed except for commerce protection and defense.
Manticore's past history of stimulating the economy and upgrading defenses of treaty partners -- and the impending collaboration between Shannon Forraker and Sonja Hemphill demonstrates the policy extends even to recent enemies -- suggests that being a mutual defense treaty partner with Manticore -- or a member of the GA -- will get successor states access to at least "Manticore Light" export versions of modern military tech.
So yes, there IS a military component of the Harrington Doctrine, but it is concentrated in Part One and counter-productive in Part Two except for "mutual defense."