hanuman wrote:n7axw wrote:I normally tend to be a sucker for moral arguments. But a nations first moral responsibility is for its own people. In the case of SEM, it must secure itself by first breaking up the League and then preparing for the confrontation with the Alignment. Any allocation of resourses must be directed to the furtherance of these twin goals.
If dealing with a situation in the verge - and there will be some - then by all means, step in and do what is needed. But otherwise, not so fast... The verge is so vast that the GA's resourses could literally be absorbed when those revolts against OFS start breaking out. There is going to have to be some prioritizing and there are going to be folks out there whom the GA are not going to be able to help and still keep their eye on the ball.
Don
Yes, my argument is moralistic to some extent, but that's exactly the point of the Harrington Doctrine, isn't it? Once the League has collapsed into however many successor states, the GA will need to offer something better to induce those successor states to ally themselves with the GA (or at least, to maintain friendly relations with it).
Let's leave the Core and Shell worlds aside for now, since we're essentially in agreement about them. The size of their population, their industrial capacity, and their military and technological potential make it absolutely imperative that the GA establishes good relations with them; their entrenched political traditions make it likely that they'll be able to maintain local stability, for the most part.
But the Protectorates and the Verge planets ARE important as well. A great number of those worlds are relatively close to the Haven Sector and the Talbott Quadrant - the GA will want to prevent any kind of widespread general instability close to its members' borders. Not only will such instability give rise to piracy, but it will also divert GA military forces from far more important deployments.
Moreover, the GA (for now, mostly Manticore, but soon also Haven and the others) conduct a great deal of its trade in the Verge and the Protectorates. Once again, general instability will lead to a surge in piracy, and will force the GA to divert military forces from elsewhere.
Far more importantly, moral behaviour isn't just some froofraa with no practical, real-world implications. Let's sketch a likely hypothetical scenario. The GA has just come through a war with the League - a war that, from the GA's side, was waged precisely because of the League's immoral neo-colonial imperialism. The League itself is gone, replaced by hundreds of successor states. Yes, many of them are stable, strong former Core and Shell worlds, and the GA is actively seeking to establish itself as a trustworthy partner of any potential allies among those former Core and Shell worlds.
But, as members of the League, those potential allies in the former Core and Shell regions have just had their arses handed to them by the GA. They don't as yet trust the GA, and in most cases there is a certain amount of fear OF the GA. The GA needs to dispel that fear and distrust, and the best way to do that is to demonstrate that it is NOT the League, that its way of doing things are far better, far more moral than that of the League, that the League's behaviour OUT IN THE PROTECTORATES was indeed immoral and unacceptable.
That is why it will be imperative for the GA to take an active role in the Protectorates and the Verge - to prevent civil conflict, to extend developmental aid, to assist where requested to do so in maintaining law and order, to help establish strong, stable local governments, to suppress piracy. The GA will need to prove that its way is better than the League's way, if it will have any chance whatsoever of implementing the Harrington Doctrine successfully.
It is a very moral position, but one that is grounded in practical necessity, I think.
Still, you're quite right regarding how vast the Verge and the Protectorates are. It will be impossible for the GA to become involved EVERYWHERE in those regions and still focus on what is truly important - the ongoing confrontation with the Alignment.
Although diplomacy and politics are quite often about perceptions and appearances, as I wrote above, diplomats and politicians are also eminently realistic creatures (or they should be, at least). I don't expect that the leaders of the League's successor states in the former Core and Shell regions will actually expect the GA to get involved everywhere in the outer regions. I don't think that will be necessary, and I think they'll be likely to understand that such an undertaking will be quite simply impossible.
What I do think is that they'll be looking at how the GA acts in those areas of the outer regions that are relatively close to its members' own borders, and those that are relatively close to the wormhole network's various termini, because that is where the GA will be most active commercially.