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HFQ Official Snippet #20

This fascinating series is a combination of historical seafaring, swashbuckling adventure, and high technological science-fiction. Join us in a discussion!
Re: HFQ Official Snippet #20
Post by PeterZ   » Tue Mar 24, 2015 2:04 pm

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I agree with you regarding Maikel, Cayleb and Sharley. They want to reform the CoGA if not abolish it. I don't believe the Maikel's revelation of this fact to Irys after her epiphany is widely shared within the Empire or Siddermark. I believe the core belief among the reformers and CoC rank and file in general is that Clyntahn is the chief cause of the CoGA excesses.

Yes, the Inquisition needs reform so that another Clyntahn cannot arise and pull/push the CoGA into another Safehold-wide bloodbath. It must be reformed because once the jihad was called by the Grand Vicar, the Grand Inquisitor called the shots in everything regarding the jihad. Once a jihad was announced the CoGA must act to win the jihad. This means that once the jihad was called, Clyntahn had the authority to prosecute the jihad against any heresey as he defined it for as long as he determined there was a hersey. There are no checks and balances to guard against the Clyntahn's of the world once jihad was called.

The Writ originally called for separation of authority in interpreting what is proscribed/heretical and prosecuting proscribed behavior/heresey. That separation was eliminated and Safehold sees the results. The Inquisition was never meant to be the sole guardian against heresy. Most Reformers will agree to this readily. I doubt they will go as far as to say that a properly reformed Inquisition is not needed. Almost everyone on Safehold believes that Darkness awaits any son of God and the CoGA MUST have its agents seeking out agents of the Dark no matter where he/she/it hides. Because this is true Safehold is not ready to dispense with the Inquisition altogether. The Writ MUST be discredited first and the best chance for that is during the Return.

The best way to deal with the Return is to spread technology as widely as possible before the Return happens. The best case is to have the OBS neutralized. Taking Zion might or might not be the surest way to neutralize the OBS. Taking Zion might actually awaken the returners sooner. We do not know yet what other triggers exist to protect the Returners. Marching on Zion with an army before that is known would risk the principal goal; to disseminate technology as widely as possible before the Return.

I believe that the Inner Circle will be torn between marching on to Zion quickly and risking an early Return and avoiding any risk that might initiate the Return prematurely. One compromise might be to utilize Nynian's network to find out what the parameters of any potential risk of an early Return would be. Another might be to accept a position within the Vicarate for a CoC cleric. Effectively to join a reformed CoGA and act as internal restraints to CoGA excesses. While doing this the CoC contingent and Nynian's group snoop to discover the tech levers without risking an early Return. I believe other options might be thought of. None of these options are viable without risking an early Return without a negotiated truce/peace.

So, the long and the short of it is that I don't believe the good guys should risk an early return. I believe that will be the conclusion of most of the CoC Inner Circle. I also believe that the broader population in the allied lands will disproportionately blame Clyntahn for the jihad. That combination will make a negotiated truce a possibility. Whether that will lead to a negotiated peace is less certain, but a risk many on both sides will be willing to take.

lyonheart wrote:Hi PeterZ,

Why single him out?

Given what his people have suffered, I very strongly doubt accepting a truce with those who ORDERED the murderers and rapists to do their worst is going to be easy to sell to his flock.

Granted he, Maikel, Gairlyng and Wylsyn are all very humble, good and Christlike, but Christ rather angrily drove the moneychangers out of the temple, I don't think he or they will settle for a job only half done.

Why bother 'giving peace a chance' when you know very well its a pretty pitiful piece of peace and what's left of the CoGA and its supporters will break it as soon as they they think they have a chance to beat the alliance?

"All that is necessary for evil to triumph is for good men to do nothing" - Edmund Burke

The idea that a future promise to reform the inquisition will be enough for a truce, when it needs to be eradicated ASAP, boggles the mind.

From all the textev, I really don't see Cayleb, Sharleyan, the inner circle especially Maikel, let alone the Lord Protector and his ministers giving up so much for the rather very little you keep suggesting the CoGA can get away with.

I'm still struggling with why you're always so focused on the alliance abandoning its critical war objectives when victory is easily in sight for a mess of pottage.

I don't think the surviving KotTL and their family clans will understand or believe what you think Magwair can or will tell them about what the M96 means; Duchairn may have a better chance, but the odds they will understand that the alliance is going to get to the temple lands by next year at the latest, or then what it will do when it occupies the eastern temple lands in terms of seizing all their property is simply too far beyond what they think is possible.

The M96's will take a lot longer to get to Zion at 40 miles per day than by the end of the spring thaw from Desnair, so where do you see them starting from?

The alliance has essentially called for the eradication if not effective elimination of the Inquisition, including ignoring its books in the Holy Writ; what compromise can there be?

Exactly where and when do you see this negotiating process beginning then taking place and for how long?

How do you see Clyntahn permitting Magwair and the rest to propose such a truce to subvert the Jihad and all his power?

Granted I want him killed, but we've had hints about Duchairn's plotting in half the books now; who knows maybe we'll get lucky this time. ;)

I still don't see the Harchong among others quietly accepting the republic becoming the obvious dominant continental power until they are truly humbled which conflicts with your truce timetable.

Feel free to further detail this repeat of Ashes of Victory.

Personally, I don't think RFC has to rewrite his old plots so much.

L
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Re: HFQ Official Snippet #20
Post by n7axw   » Tue Mar 24, 2015 2:12 pm

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I agree with Lyonheart here on how things will end. It will be like Berlin in 1945. The only thing that will change that are two words: unconditional surrender received before the Haarahlds convoy the transports into temple harbor to land the troops.

Don

PS: They better hope those troops are EOC rather than pissed off Siddarmarkans playing "The Pikes of Kolostar."
When any group seeks political power in God's name, both religion and politics are instantly corrupted.
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Re: HFQ Official Snippet #20
Post by Louis R   » Tue Mar 24, 2015 2:43 pm

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Let me be blunt for a change:

Anybody who imagines that Green Valley's projection for the movements of the Army of Midhold - the realistic one - isn't accurate is a blithering idiot who knows f-all about winter warfare.

Just to confirm my own experience [I'm trained in winter warfare, but not infantry], I checked with an ex-RCR platoon commander: he would expect to move his troops 30km/day _max_ under arctic/subarctic conditions - using modern mechanical transport for his logistics. And to sustain that pace for 10 days _max_. He figured 25km was more realistic because that wouldn't mean pushing excessively. FYI, the AoM kit list was, except for the sources of the fibres used and the fuel employed, drawn straight from Base Supply at CFB Shilo. I've used all of it myself. And yes, the Canadian Forces does have machines we can use for log support during the Arctic winter. For those who can't interpret the numbers, that's 18.6 and 15.5 miles per day. With troops who'll need a good rest after doing it. At this point, for Green Valley to make another 600 miles, the thaw has to be delayed until close to the end of April. That would surprise an awful lot of people, that would.

I'm actually a bit more optimistic than the Baron: I think he does have a chance of making it all the way to Ohlarn before the thaw starts, not just Fairkyn, but without knowing exactly were he is at the beginning of HFQ it's hard to be sure. What he will most definitely not do is get through the Gap, or catch Wyrshym huddled beside his stove. Wyrshym isn't an idiot; at the very least he's going to wonder why Gorthyk Nybar isn't complaining about how cold it is anymore - and take steps to find out. Wyrshym is also not a moral coward. If he has to stare down the Inquisition to operate intelligently, like Ahlverez he will do it. It would be surprising if he doesn't have at least 10, and more likely 20 - 30, days warning before Green Valley can cut the canal behind him. If he's still holding at Guarnak he'll get away clean with everything that isn't already in the Northland or Sylmahn Gaps, because he won't sit still to be cut off - and he's probably good enough to get many the latter troops out even if they're under attack. It would probably look rather more like a rout than he'd prefer, but he can probably do it. The one chance of actually cutting him off would be for all his reserves to be drawn forward by a attack in the gap and somehow pinned so that he can't disengage when the AoM moves down behind him. Given the skill already displayed by his commanders in getting themselves out of cracks, and BGV's reflections on the situation in the Gap, that would be, at best, difficult to accomplish.

Don't get too optimistic on this front.

As for Kaitswyrth, no I am not suggesting Clyntahn would authorise a withdrawal. In fact, I'm confident he wouldn't. I'm also pretty confident that Kaitswyrth hasn't spent the last 6 months cowering in fear behind the ramparts of Aivahnstyn. For one thing, he's over a hundred miles from the blocking position Symkyn has been holding in the woods down the Daivyn, so there's probably not much happening to keep the memory fresh. For another, your confidence in his TOE is almost certainly misplaced; both his current strength and his equipment are doubtless quite different from the last info from two books ago. I certainly don't recall any textev that the AoG _stopped_ re-equipping its own personnel because it had to deal with Harchong. Reduced and delayed, yes, but not stopped, any more than the Dohlarans did. Don't assume that, just because we haven't had a peek inside the AoGlht since the day they ran head-on into a buzz saw, that means that it hasn't been reorganised, re-equipped and retrained at least as thoroughly as the AoSyl. Getting Kaitswyrth new heavy weapons in particular will have been much, much simpler than getting the same material to Wyrshym. To what extent he'd figured out what to do with it is - because we haven't seen him recently - an open question, but he's a fanatic, not a fool. A _humilitated_ fanatic. That's a weakness that can be exploited, since it might well lead him to decide to stand and fight to the last man, or at least the last Kaitswyrth, but if so you can be sure that he's determined to do so _effectively_. It also means that he's been putting a lot of thought, effort and time into preparing to get his own back. Still, if he decides that he can't stand effectively, he is much less likely to throw good troops after bad than Clyntahn, say, might think suitable. And, if his army does happen to run out of Kaitswyrths, it's a pretty safe bet that command will pass to somebody who is quite aware that forgiveness is easier to come by than permission even in the AoG. A heroic fighting withdrawal would earn Maigwair's approbation.

On reflection, I'm not prepared to call this one either way. We simply don't have the data to base a judgement on. Neither do most of the characters. Which is why sending the Army of Cliff Peak _back_ to Cliff Peak now that it doesn't need to worry about the security of its rear is going to seem like a sensible thing to do.


lyonheart wrote:Hi LouisR,

Thanks for the thoughtful post.

I'll comment below between the **.

Louis R wrote:A couple of things:

I still think you're underestimating the degree to which psychology can trump strategy. The Might Host etc. is Clyntahn's fair-haired child. Unlike those closet Reformists from Dohlar and Desnair [of course they are - they keep on quitting instead of trusting God to hand them the victory!], all they need to do is line up shoulder to shoulder to trample Siddarmark into the mud. What can possibly withstand their inexorable progress. Gunpowder? Piffle! The heretics will shoot themselves dry and be smashed by the weight of the remainder. Why would he _allow_ them to be split up. He might permit some discussion of whether it would make better sense to send them around the north or the south, and even let himself be persuaded to do both [which actually does have a strategic argument in its favour] but it won't be for any merely practical reasons.


**I have to disagree with your whole view of the Go4 dynamics, Clyntahn isn't all powerful; he knows his failures have encouraged Magwair and Duchairn, but he can't stop their continued cooperation.

The failure of the Army of Shiloh will continue that process.

Clyntahn's irrationality may be increasing, but he still doesn't have and hasn't tried to control the MHoG from the textev.

Any such attempt will come latter after they get in theater, which will be at least a couple month's at best, since he won't be able to fault Magwair and Duchairn until then.

Breaking the pattern of Magwair and Duchairn's orders requires some overriding reason, which Magwair and Duchairn being rational won't provide him the excuse for attempting this putsch.**


Sure, Maigwair and especially Duchairn know better, but do you think they'll be able to pry operational control of _this_ force out of Clyntahn's hands? Maigwair can't even be sure who his direct subordinates are going to obey. For that matter, is Maigwair himself proof against the vision of Juggernaut bearing down on the opposition on 4 million legs?


** Yes, Magwair is at least that smart.

Remember he created the AoG, which given all its complexity and even faults still impresses Duchairn and even BGV somewhat, according to their textev thoughts.

Magwair has been exercising operational control while they've been traveling over 2000 miles, so I don't see Clyntahn being stupid enough to try to seize control anytime soon, and the message lag means it'll be too late for him to change the outcome of any battle, no matter what kind of military genius he thinks he may be or have become by then.**


Something you are probably _over_estimating is the significance of the South to either side for a considerable period - likely, for the remainder of the war. You also seem to be forgetting what the object of the exercise has to be for the Allies: they need to _destroy_ the AoG, not allow it to withdraw, lick its wounds further and come back, with or without the Mighty etc. Sure, taking Dairnyth cuts off Kaitwyrth's supply line and puts the alliance back on the Bay of Bess, but what does the AoGht do then? Probably, hightails it back to Lake City, with water transport available most, maybe all, the way to the Sair. Even if Kaitswyrth hasn't learned anything, you can be sure his better divisional commanders have. Let Maigwair get them back in reach and had them over to our friend Bishop Barhnabai, and the AoSyl won't be going anyplace it doesn't want to. The immediate need is to cut Kaitwyrth off in Aivahnstyn, or better pull him into a deployment to the south and east, pin him down and destroy him. Which means that the Army of Cliff Peak has to hook up behind him _now_, not take a holiday on the sea shore. It would make a lot of sense for Eastshare to head to Dairnyth first, then move back up the Fairmyn leaving Hanth to keep the Dohlarans trimmed back, but High Mount should be heading straight to the Daivyn behind Aivahnstyn, hopefully with something going on to distract Kaitswyrth and keep him from noticing or at least thinking that he should maybe ignore the urging he's getting to hold fast.

** How is it you think I don't expect the AoG to be destroyed in detail very soon?

That is, by mid April at the latest.

Given General Symkyn's [GS] superior troops and firepower, I don't think Kaitswyrth will get away.

For some reason you and Anwi seem to keep forgetting him and his 75,000 man army.

Sending EHM up to Aivahstyn would mean Kaitswyrth is occupying the attention of 2 alliance armies that have around twice his effective numbers, I don't see the alliance, especially the inner circle being that stupid.

Given how demented you think Clyntahn is, having him finally grant Kaitswyrth permission to retreat counters your whole argument.

The connecting canal locks won't be fixed until April, Kaitswyrth may not exist by the time he might try to use them if he did get permission.

EHM isn't headed to Dairnyth for a holiday, but to hold and defend the alliance flank, NTM cut the temple's communications with Dohlar, Silkiah and the whole continent of Howard, among other strategically important things; I thought you had seen and argued for that before.

Now I've previously argued that EHM should head for the Daivyn River because I've expected that the MHoG center sub-army would head directly across from the Bedard canal east end to the Charayn Canal to replace Kaitswyrth ASAP in only about 20+ days if they had enough dragons etc.

I've then described how a combination of ironclads and GS on the north shore and EHM on the south might destroy AGC rather easily.**


The AoSyl needs the same treatment, but unfortunately I'm not very sanguine about Wyrshym letting it happen. Ideally, the AoM will slip in behind him while his attention is held by an attack on his forward units out of the Gap. If that happens, his army is gone, and hopefully all its senior commanders killed of captured, but it depends on him not noticing a whole army marching down out of the Ohlahrn Gap until too late. Somehow, I can't see that happening. I'm not at all sure that even Kaitswyrth can be nailed down, although his personality suggests that there's at least a good chance of doing it.


** I'm betting BGV will achieve strategic surprise, and Wyrshym's remaining army down at the lake will be too deep to escape [200-250 miles south of Guarnak in winter] and being caught between both alliance forces will be effectively crushed.

I don't see Clyntahn suddenly authorizing either to retreat, however sensible that might be.

Given all the concern about Ahlverez being condemned from the pulpit for running away, I don't see the same idiot permitting the AoG armies to get away with doing the same, when he hasn't before.

Before the MHoG can begin to move, the Go4 are going to find themselves with a couple fewer armies, allies and a continent than they thought they had..

Expecting them to keep the MHoG wholly intact after that disaster is absurd.

I look forward to your future posts**


*quote="lyonheart"*Hi Anwi,

Given the alliance has 2-3 month's before the MHoGatA gets to the front, I think the alliance has plenty of time to make things much worse for the Go4, forcing them to split it into at least 4 sub armies as I've suggested so many times before.

Regarding whether they're being ready for war, I guess it depends on your definition of trained troops [a few month's training during the winter really won't prepare them for what they're about to experience, and I suspect RFC is going to highlight many of their inadequacies as they get closer to the front lines.

< snip >
Remembering that Kaitswyrth had only around 9,000 rifles at last report while Symkyn has some 75,000 well armed men, Kaitswyrth and what's left of his army aren't long for this world, nor do I expect Wyrshym to last until May either.

Given all the bad news about to happen to their armies the Go4 will have to split up their last army, making it far easier to defeat in detail.

So no, they don't need to concentrate the ICA all up north.

I've previously explained in probably too much detail how one or two ICA/alliance armies working together could defeat the respective MHoGatA sub armies rather easily, especially given the strategic and tactical mastery the ICA has already demonstrated.

I don't see why Symkyn couldn't provide the viewpoint character needed to eliminate Kaitswyrth, since that's how he was first used in MTaT.

< snip >

Given EHM is west and north of DE, having him go further south seems far less efficient than I'd expect from DE, crossing 2 supply lines etc.

Given DE's preference for celerity from the first time we read his interaction with Merlin, I don't think he's moving very slowly now, especially when he has the enemy on the run.

Granted he has to sort out the POW's, and save as many of the ~60-67,000 captured cavalry mounts (how many have to be put down etc) and possibly send them south to those patriotic provinces to restore, since they're rather rare and valuable in the republic right now, but that's probably another thread.

If EHM takes Dairnyth, then Kaitswyrth and any MHoGatA sub army heading west from the Langhorne Canal will soon starve, providing rather more depth for the republic, and enabling Symkyn to flank any sub army headed east via the repaired canals, and cut its supply line behind it.

< snip >

L

*quote*
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Re: HFQ Official Snippet #20
Post by lyonheart   » Tue Mar 24, 2015 5:42 pm

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Hi PeterZ,

I agree the inner circle hasn't told everyone its ultimate plans, but I think the average CoC or reformist knows the CoGA has been corrupt for centuries, that the Go4 and Clyntahn are only symptoms of that corruption not recent aberrations, so the idea only the Inquisition needs some correction isn't going to be acceptable to any of them with a brain.

Given that Zhasyn Cahnyr was a member of the circle for around 20 years, and friends with all those that were killed and or tortured, which constantly waited for what it hoped would be its opportunity to fix things; I very strongly doubt that now when he has the power or influence to truly change the CoGA rather more than slightly or moderately, he's going to back off and and settle for promises to make the Inquisition better.

Getting the CoGA to accept the CoC and reformists, when the former has effectively disavowed the book of Schueler etc, would be very interesting if RFC were to follow your assumptions, but I don't think he has time in the story arc for such sub plots.

Given I expect the alliance to have a permanent presence in Zion and the temple after getting into the temple later this year or next year for certain since the Go4 can't stop the ICN getting to Port Harbor at the very least, besides owning the eastern KotTL and BS, representation in JOINT religious councils isn't too much of a stretch, but as part of some CoGA council would be too confusing for too many on both sides, especially since the circle recognised reconciliation was impossible.

I've pointed out before that your scenario practically guarantees another schism in the CoGA on the right, ie another war before the dust of this one settles, and I don't think that's where RFC is headed, but it could be very entertaining.

From what you're suggesting, it's is going to be rather hard for the CoGA to explain to their rank and file why the CoC and Reformists are now in the CoGA councils, if they weren't ever truly heretics.

If they weren't, then the CoGA and Grand Vicar were so greatly wrong and killed millions of innocents out of greed and a passion for power etc, then they don't speak for god and must all be replaced, including Duchairn.

So who will replace them?

A bunch of Reformists?

How likely are they to be accepted?

That obvious rejection among other things, which may get the CoGA congregations to start finally thinking and considering all the failures of the vicarate etc and begin to think about what they truly believe and should believe and how their church should operate.

Certainly entertaining all right.

L


PeterZ wrote:I agree with you regarding Maikel, Cayleb and Sharley. They want to reform the CoGA if not abolish it. I don't believe the Maikel's revelation of this fact to Irys after her epiphany is widely shared within the Empire or Siddermark. I believe the core belief among the reformers and CoC rank and file in general is that Clyntahn is the chief cause of the CoGA excesses.

Yes, the Inquisition needs reform so that another Clyntahn cannot arise and pull/push the CoGA into another Safehold-wide bloodbath. It must be reformed because once the jihad was called by the Grand Vicar, the Grand Inquisitor called the shots in everything regarding the jihad. Once a jihad was announced the CoGA must act to win the jihad. This means that once the jihad was called, Clyntahn had the authority to prosecute the jihad against any heresey as he defined it for as long as he determined there was a hersey. There are no checks and balances to guard against the Clyntahn's of the world once jihad was called.

The Writ originally called for separation of authority in interpreting what is proscribed/heretical and prosecuting proscribed behavior/heresey. That separation was eliminated and Safehold sees the results. The Inquisition was never meant to be the sole guardian against heresy. Most Reformers will agree to this readily. I doubt they will go as far as to say that a properly reformed Inquisition is not needed. Almost everyone on Safehold believes that Darkness awaits any son of God and the CoGA MUST have its agents seeking out agents of the Dark no matter where he/she/it hides. Because this is true Safehold is not ready to dispense with the Inquisition altogether. The Writ MUST be discredited first and the best chance for that is during the Return.

The best way to deal with the Return is to spread technology as widely as possible before the Return happens. The best case is to have the OBS neutralized. Taking Zion might or might not be the surest way to neutralize the OBS. Taking Zion might actually awaken the returners sooner. We do not know yet what other triggers exist to protect the Returners. Marching on Zion with an army before that is known would risk the principal goal; to disseminate technology as widely as possible before the Return.

I believe that the Inner Circle will be torn between marching on to Zion quickly and risking an early Return and avoiding any risk that might initiate the Return prematurely. One compromise might be to utilize Nynian's network to find out what the parameters of any potential risk of an early Return would be. Another might be to accept a position within the Vicarate for a CoC cleric. Effectively to join a reformed CoGA and act as internal restraints to CoGA excesses. While doing this the CoC contingent and Nynian's group snoop to discover the tech levers without risking an early Return. I believe other options might be thought of. None of these options are viable without risking an early Return without a negotiated truce/peace.

So, the long and the short of it is that I don't believe the good guys should risk an early return. I believe that will be the conclusion of most of the CoC Inner Circle. I also believe that the broader population in the allied lands will disproportionately blame Clyntahn for the jihad. That combination will make a negotiated truce a possibility. Whether that will lead to a negotiated peace is less certain, but a risk many on both sides will be willing to take.

lyonheart wrote:Hi PeterZ,

Why single him out?

Given what his people have suffered, I very strongly doubt accepting a truce with those who ORDERED the murderers and rapists to do their worst is going to be easy to sell to his flock.

Granted he, Maikel, Gairlyng and Wylsyn are all very humble, good and Christlike, but Christ rather angrily drove the moneychangers out of the temple, I don't think he or they will settle for a job only half done.

Why bother 'giving peace a chance' when you know very well its a pretty pitiful piece of peace and what's left of the CoGA and its supporters will break it as soon as they they think they have a chance to beat the alliance?

"All that is necessary for evil to triumph is for good men to do nothing" - Edmund Burke

The idea that a future promise to reform the inquisition will be enough for a truce, when it needs to be eradicated ASAP, boggles the mind.

From all the textev, I really don't see Cayleb, Sharleyan, the inner circle especially Maikel, let alone the Lord Protector and his ministers giving up so much for the rather very little you keep suggesting the CoGA can get away with.

I'm still struggling with why you're always so focused on the alliance abandoning its critical war objectives when victory is easily in sight for a mess of pottage.

I don't think the surviving KotTL and their family clans will understand or believe what you think Magwair can or will tell them about what the M96 means; Duchairn may have a better chance, but the odds they will understand that the alliance is going to get to the temple lands by next year at the latest, or then what it will do when it occupies the eastern temple lands in terms of seizing all their property is simply too far beyond what they think is possible.

The M96's will take a lot longer to get to Zion at 40 miles per day than by the end of the spring thaw from Desnair, so where do you see them starting from?

The alliance has essentially called for the eradication if not effective elimination of the Inquisition, including ignoring its books in the Holy Writ; what compromise can there be?

Exactly where and when do you see this negotiating process beginning then taking place and for how long?

How do you see Clyntahn permitting Magwair and the rest to propose such a truce to subvert the Jihad and all his power?

Granted I want him killed, but we've had hints about Duchairn's plotting in half the books now; who knows maybe we'll get lucky this time. ;)

I still don't see the Harchong among others quietly accepting the republic becoming the obvious dominant continental power until they are truly humbled which conflicts with your truce timetable.

Feel free to further detail this repeat of Ashes of Victory.

Personally, I don't think RFC has to rewrite his old plots so much.

L
Any snippet or post from RFC is good if not great!
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Re: HFQ Official Snippet #20
Post by lyonheart   » Tue Mar 24, 2015 5:45 pm

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Hi Don,

Yup.

Quite right.

Keep smiling and sail on. :D

L


n7axw wrote:I agree with Lyonheart here on how things will end. It will be like Berlin in 1945. The only thing that will change that are two words: unconditional surrender received before the Haarahlds convoy the transports into temple harbor to land the troops.

Don

PS: They better hope those troops are EOC rather than pissed off Siddarmarkans playing "The Pikes of Kolostar."
Any snippet or post from RFC is good if not great!
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Re: HFQ Official Snippet #20
Post by Peter2   » Tue Mar 24, 2015 5:45 pm

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PeterZ wrote:
[snip]

Yes, the Inquisition needs reform so that another Clyntahn cannot arise and pull/push the CoGA into another Safehold-wide bloodbath. It must be reformed because once the jihad was called by the Grand Vicar, the Grand Inquisitor called the shots in everything regarding the jihad. Once a jihad was announced the CoGA must act to win the jihad. This means that once the jihad was called, Clyntahn had the authority to prosecute the jihad against any heresey as he defined it for as long as he determined there was a hersey. There are no checks and balances to guard against the Clyntahn's of the world once jihad was called.

[snip]



Reforming the Inquisition is likely to be a messy, bloody business. There are going to be quite a lot of people around who have seen their relatives dragged off and tortured to death. A fair number of those will also know that no way was it justified – remember Sarkyn? There are going to be quite a lot more who have seen their relatives dragged off and worked to death in slave labour camps. I really really don't think that any of those people are going to accept "Pretty please, I'm sorry!" when the Inquisition starts to reform. I think it is more likely that trees, ridgepoles, and rafters will start to bear purple fruit – i.e. jerked (by the neck) Inquisitor. And that's if they're lucky. If their own torture tools are handy, it might take some of them a lot longer to quit their vale of tears.
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Re: HFQ Official Snippet #20
Post by Keith_w   » Tue Mar 24, 2015 5:51 pm

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Location: Ontario, Canada

Louis R wrote:Let me be blunt for a change:

Anybody who imagines that Green Valley's projection for the movements of the Army of Midhold - the realistic one - isn't accurate is a blithering idiot who knows f-all about winter warfare.

Just to confirm my own experience [I'm trained in winter warfare, but not infantry], I checked with an ex-RCR platoon commander: he would expect to move his troops 30km/day _max_ under arctic/subarctic conditions - using modern mechanical transport for his logistics. And to sustain that pace for 10 days _max_. He figured 25km was more realistic because that wouldn't mean pushing excessively. FYI, the AoM kit list was, except for the sources of the fibres used and the fuel employed, drawn straight from Base Supply at CFB Shilo. I've used all of it myself. And yes, the Canadian Forces does have machines we can use for log support during the Arctic winter. For those who can't interpret the numbers, that's 18.6 and 15.5 miles per day. With troops who'll need a good rest after doing it. At this point, for Green Valley to make another 600 miles, the thaw has to be delayed until close to the end of April. That would surprise an awful lot of people, that would.


Having toted all that stuff, and an FN C1 (10.5 LBs fully loaded) on snowshoes, while taking turns towing a toboggan with supplies and the section Bell tent, through the woods of Northern Ontario, I can tell you it ain't easy, and if the Rancid Chicken R... oops, Royal Canadian Regiment can make that distance each day and every day, I'd be amazed. Having worked with both 1 RCR and 3 RCR, (early 70s) I know there are members of that regiment who would have had trouble walking, never mind wandering through the bush in the winter.
Last edited by Keith_w on Tue Mar 24, 2015 7:07 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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A common mistake people make when trying to design something completely foolproof is to underestimate the ingenuity of complete fools.
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Re: HFQ Official Snippet #20
Post by lyonheart   » Tue Mar 24, 2015 7:06 pm

lyonheart
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Posts: 4853
Joined: Tue Sep 08, 2009 11:27 pm

Hi LouisR,

This subject has been the topic of quite a few threads.

Given how close RFC is holding his cards to his chest, we still don't have enough data to see how he's going solve the apparent impossibility of achieving his objective.

I've spent time in winter camps, and my experience was that road marches were better than cross country snow shoeing which was better or easier than skiing [for me at least] and they were nothing like 15-19 miles [just 5-6km IIRC].

My impression is that you're projecting what you'd do in these characters' situations, which partly because you know more than they do is prone to problems, especially if you're smarter than they are.

We haven't seen Kaitswyrth since last August or Symkyn since September so our prognostications are likely to be inherently inaccurate, but claiming Kaitswyrth has turned it around seems a bit of a stretch.

If Aivahnstyn is his Headquarters, who in charge at the Glacierheart border two hundred miles away, or has he withdrawn everyone there to the city?

Having lost 2/3 of his rifles to an inferior force, which if he's competent as you suggest he should know he outnumbered DE roughly 12-1 by now, how much greater firepower does he project Symkyn has now with 4-5 times as many men?

We have textev that Kaitswyrth hasn't reorganized his army because he still has his pike-men, so some of your suppositions are suspect.

Given the priority the MHoGatA had for rifles since immediately after Kaitswyrth's folly, presuming he's received replacements without textev until after they get theirs is risky.

Dohlar's improved weapons supply cycle is far shorter and quicker than Kaitswyrth's from Zion by around 4 times., so they're not comparable.

For all we know he's still in the funk he was after he fled to Aivahnstyn, perhaps he's been drunk ever since.

It's also quite possible he's spent most of his time inventing a narrative of his great defensive exploits and future plans in his dispatches, like MacArthur did in the Philippines.

We should get a snippet on the subject soon I hope.

L


Louis R wrote:Let me be blunt for a change:

Anybody who imagines that Green Valley's projection for the movements of the Army of Midhold - the realistic one - isn't accurate is a blithering idiot who knows f-all about winter warfare.

Just to confirm my own experience [I'm trained in winter warfare, but not infantry], I checked with an ex-RCR platoon commander: he would expect to move his troops 30km/day _max_ under arctic/subarctic conditions - using modern mechanical transport for his logistics. And to sustain that pace for 10 days _max_. He figured 25km was more realistic because that wouldn't mean pushing excessively. FYI, the AoM kit list was, except for the sources of the fibres used and the fuel employed, drawn straight from Base Supply at CFB Shilo. I've used all of it myself. And yes, the Canadian Forces does have machines we can use for log support during the Arctic winter. For those who can't interpret the numbers, that's 18.6 and 15.5 miles per day. With troops who'll need a good rest after doing it. At this point, for Green Valley to make another 600 miles, the thaw has to be delayed until close to the end of April. That would surprise an awful lot of people, that would.

I'm actually a bit more optimistic than the Baron: I think he does have a chance of making it all the way to Ohlarn before the thaw starts, not just Fairkyn, but without knowing exactly were he is at the beginning of HFQ it's hard to be sure. What he will most definitely not do is get through the Gap, or catch Wyrshym huddled beside his stove. Wyrshym isn't an idiot; at the very least he's going to wonder why Gorthyk Nybar isn't complaining about how cold it is anymore - and take steps to find out. Wyrshym is also not a moral coward. If he has to stare down the Inquisition to operate intelligently, like Ahlverez he will do it. It would be surprising if he doesn't have at least 10, and more likely 20 - 30, days warning before Green Valley can cut the canal behind him. If he's still holding at Guarnak he'll get away clean with everything that isn't already in the Northland or Sylmahn Gaps, because he won't sit still to be cut off - and he's probably good enough to get many the latter troops out even if they're under attack. It would probably look rather more like a rout than he'd prefer, but he can probably do it. The one chance of actually cutting him off would be for all his reserves to be drawn forward by a attack in the gap and somehow pinned so that he can't disengage when the AoM moves down behind him. Given the skill already displayed by his commanders in getting themselves out of cracks, and BGV's reflections on the situation in the Gap, that would be, at best, difficult to accomplish.

Don't get too optimistic on this front.

As for Kaitswyrth, no I am not suggesting Clyntahn would authorise a withdrawal. In fact, I'm confident he wouldn't. I'm also pretty confident that Kaitswyrth hasn't spent the last 6 months cowering in fear behind the ramparts of Aivahnstyn. For one thing, he's over a hundred miles from the blocking position Symkyn has been holding in the woods down the Daivyn, so there's probably not much happening to keep the memory fresh. For another, your confidence in his TOE is almost certainly misplaced; both his current strength and his equipment are doubtless quite different from the last info from two books ago. I certainly don't recall any textev that the AoG _stopped_ re-equipping its own personnel because it had to deal with Harchong. Reduced and delayed, yes, but not stopped, any more than the Dohlarans did. Don't assume that, just because we haven't had a peek inside the AoGlht since the day they ran head-on into a buzz saw, that means that it hasn't been reorganised, re-equipped and retrained at least as thoroughly as the AoSyl. Getting Kaitswyrth new heavy weapons in particular will have been much, much simpler than getting the same material to Wyrshym. To what extent he'd figured out what to do with it is - because we haven't seen him recently - an open question, but he's a fanatic, not a fool. A _humilitated_ fanatic. That's a weakness that can be exploited, since it might well lead him to decide to stand and fight to the last man, or at least the last Kaitswyrth, but if so you can be sure that he's determined to do so _effectively_. It also means that he's been putting a lot of thought, effort and time into preparing to get his own back. Still, if he decides that he can't stand effectively, he is much less likely to throw good troops after bad than Clyntahn, say, might think suitable. And, if his army does happen to run out of Kaitswyrths, it's a pretty safe bet that command will pass to somebody who is quite aware that forgiveness is easier to come by than permission even in the AoG. A heroic fighting withdrawal would earn Maigwair's approbation.

On reflection, I'm not prepared to call this one either way. We simply don't have the data to base a judgement on. Neither do most of the characters. Which is why sending the Army of Cliff Peak _back_ to Cliff Peak now that it doesn't need to worry about the security of its rear is going to seem like a sensible thing to do.


*quote="lyonheart"*Hi LouisR,

Thanks for the thoughtful post.

I'll comment below between the **.

Louis R wrote:A couple of things:

I still think you're underestimating the degree to which psychology can trump strategy. The Might Host etc. is Clyntahn's fair-haired child. Unlike those closet Reformists from Dohlar and Desnair [of course they are - they keep on quitting instead of trusting God to hand them the victory!], all they need to do is line up shoulder to shoulder to trample Siddarmark into the mud. What can possibly withstand their inexorable progress. Gunpowder? Piffle! The heretics will shoot themselves dry and be smashed by the weight of the remainder. Why would he _allow_ them to be split up. He might permit some discussion of whether it would make better sense to send them around the north or the south, and even let himself be persuaded to do both [which actually does have a strategic argument in its favour] but it won't be for any merely practical reasons.


**I have to disagree with your whole view of the Go4 dynamics, Clyntahn isn't all powerful; he knows his failures have encouraged Magwair and Duchairn, but he can't stop their continued cooperation.

The failure of the Army of Shiloh will continue that process.

Clyntahn's irrationality may be increasing, but he still doesn't have and hasn't tried to control the MHoG from the textev.

Any such attempt will come latter after they get in theater, which will be at least a couple month's at best, since he won't be able to fault Magwair and Duchairn until then.

Breaking the pattern of Magwair and Duchairn's orders requires some overriding reason, which Magwair and Duchairn being rational won't provide him the excuse for attempting this putsch.**


Sure, Maigwair and especially Duchairn know better, but do you think they'll be able to pry operational control of _this_ force out of Clyntahn's hands? Maigwair can't even be sure who his direct subordinates are going to obey. For that matter, is Maigwair himself proof against the vision of Juggernaut bearing down on the opposition on 4 million legs?


** Yes, Magwair is at least that smart.

Remember he created the AoG, which given all its complexity and even faults still impresses Duchairn and even BGV somewhat, according to their textev thoughts.

Magwair has been exercising operational control while they've been traveling over 2000 miles, so I don't see Clyntahn being stupid enough to try to seize control anytime soon, and the message lag means it'll be too late for him to change the outcome of any battle, no matter what kind of military genius he thinks he may be or have become by then.**


Something you are probably _over_estimating is the significance of the South to either side for a considerable period - likely, for the remainder of the war. You also seem to be forgetting what the object of the exercise has to be for the Allies: they need to _destroy_ the AoG, not allow it to withdraw, lick its wounds further and come back, with or without the Mighty etc. Sure, taking Dairnyth cuts off Kaitwyrth's supply line and puts the alliance back on the Bay of Bess, but what does the AoGht do then? Probably, hightails it back to Lake City, with water transport available most, maybe all, the way to the Sair. Even if Kaitswyrth hasn't learned anything, you can be sure his better divisional commanders have. Let Maigwair get them back in reach and had them over to our friend Bishop Barhnabai, and the AoSyl won't be going anyplace it doesn't want to. The immediate need is to cut Kaitwyrth off in Aivahnstyn, or better pull him into a deployment to the south and east, pin him down and destroy him. Which means that the Army of Cliff Peak has to hook up behind him _now_, not take a holiday on the sea shore. It would make a lot of sense for Eastshare to head to Dairnyth first, then move back up the Fairmyn leaving Hanth to keep the Dohlarans trimmed back, but High Mount should be heading straight to the Daivyn behind Aivahnstyn, hopefully with something going on to distract Kaitswyrth and keep him from noticing or at least thinking that he should maybe ignore the urging he's getting to hold fast.

** How is it you think I don't expect the AoG to be destroyed in detail very soon?

That is, by mid April at the latest.

Given General Symkyn's [GS] superior troops and firepower, I don't think Kaitswyrth will get away.

For some reason you and Anwi seem to keep forgetting him and his 75,000 man army.

Sending EHM up to Aivahstyn would mean Kaitswyrth is occupying the attention of 2 alliance armies that have around twice his effective numbers, I don't see the alliance, especially the inner circle being that stupid.

Given how demented you think Clyntahn is, having him finally grant Kaitswyrth permission to retreat counters your whole argument.

The connecting canal locks won't be fixed until April, Kaitswyrth may not exist by the time he might try to use them if he did get permission.

EHM isn't headed to Dairnyth for a holiday, but to hold and defend the alliance flank, NTM cut the temple's communications with Dohlar, Silkiah and the whole continent of Howard, among other strategically important things; I thought you had seen and argued for that before.

Now I've previously argued that EHM should head for the Daivyn River because I've expected that the MHoG center sub-army would head directly across from the Bedard canal east end to the Charayn Canal to replace Kaitswyrth ASAP in only about 20+ days if they had enough dragons etc.

I've then described how a combination of ironclads and GS on the north shore and EHM on the south might destroy AGC rather easily.**


The AoSyl needs the same treatment, but unfortunately I'm not very sanguine about Wyrshym letting it happen. Ideally, the AoM will slip in behind him while his attention is held by an attack on his forward units out of the Gap. If that happens, his army is gone, and hopefully all its senior commanders killed of captured, but it depends on him not noticing a whole army marching down out of the Ohlahrn Gap until too late. Somehow, I can't see that happening. I'm not at all sure that even Kaitswyrth can be nailed down, although his personality suggests that there's at least a good chance of doing it.


** I'm betting BGV will achieve strategic surprise, and Wyrshym's remaining army down at the lake will be too deep to escape [200-250 miles south of Guarnak in winter] and being caught between both alliance forces will be effectively crushed.

I don't see Clyntahn suddenly authorizing either to retreat, however sensible that might be.

Given all the concern about Ahlverez being condemned from the pulpit for running away, I don't see the same idiot permitting the AoG armies to get away with doing the same, when he hasn't before.

Before the MHoG can begin to move, the Go4 are going to find themselves with a couple fewer armies, allies and a continent than they thought they had..

Expecting them to keep the MHoG wholly intact after that disaster is absurd.

I look forward to your future posts**


*quote="lyonheart"*Hi Anwi,

Given the alliance has 2-3 month's before the MHoGatA gets to the front, I think the alliance has plenty of time to make things much worse for the Go4, forcing them to split it into at least 4 sub armies as I've suggested so many times before.

Regarding whether they're being ready for war, I guess it depends on your definition of trained troops [a few month's training during the winter really won't prepare them for what they're about to experience, and I suspect RFC is going to highlight many of their inadequacies as they get closer to the front lines.

< snip >
Remembering that Kaitswyrth had only around 9,000 rifles at last report while Symkyn has some 75,000 well armed men, Kaitswyrth and what's left of his army aren't long for this world, nor do I expect Wyrshym to last until May either.

Given all the bad news about to happen to their armies the Go4 will have to split up their last army, making it far easier to defeat in detail.

So no, they don't need to concentrate the ICA all up north.

I've previously explained in probably too much detail how one or two ICA/alliance armies working together could defeat the respective MHoGatA sub armies rather easily, especially given the strategic and tactical mastery the ICA has already demonstrated.

I don't see why Symkyn couldn't provide the viewpoint character needed to eliminate Kaitswyrth, since that's how he was first used in MTaT.

< snip >

Given EHM is west and north of DE, having him go further south seems far less efficient than I'd expect from DE, crossing 2 supply lines etc.

Given DE's preference for celerity from the first time we read his interaction with Merlin, I don't think he's moving very slowly now, especially when he has the enemy on the run.

Granted he has to sort out the POW's, and save as many of the ~60-67,000 captured cavalry mounts (how many have to be put down etc) and possibly send them south to those patriotic provinces to restore, since they're rather rare and valuable in the republic right now, but that's probably another thread.

If EHM takes Dairnyth, then Kaitswyrth and any MHoGatA sub army heading west from the Langhorne Canal will soon starve, providing rather more depth for the republic, and enabling Symkyn to flank any sub army headed east via the repaired canals, and cut its supply line behind it.

< snip >

L

*quote*
*quote*
Any snippet or post from RFC is good if not great!
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Re: HFQ Official Snippet #20
Post by PeterZ   » Tue Mar 24, 2015 9:34 pm

PeterZ
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Posts: 6432
Joined: Fri Apr 01, 2011 1:11 pm
Location: Colorado

Peter,

I totally agree with you. Reform is how the process will be sold to the KoTL. What's to stop Magwair and Duchairn from acquiescing to criminal trials for Inquisitors who broke the law as part of the negotiations? I am sure Duchairn and Magwair will be eager to rid themselves of the Clyntahnistas. This way the blame for this purge lies with the Allies.

Re-Pete
Peter2 wrote:
PeterZ wrote:
[snip]

Yes, the Inquisition needs reform so that another Clyntahn cannot arise and pull/push the CoGA into another Safehold-wide bloodbath. It must be reformed because once the jihad was called by the Grand Vicar, the Grand Inquisitor called the shots in everything regarding the jihad. Once a jihad was announced the CoGA must act to win the jihad. This means that once the jihad was called, Clyntahn had the authority to prosecute the jihad against any heresey as he defined it for as long as he determined there was a hersey. There are no checks and balances to guard against the Clyntahn's of the world once jihad was called.

[snip]



Reforming the Inquisition is likely to be a messy, bloody business. There are going to be quite a lot of people around who have seen their relatives dragged off and tortured to death. A fair number of those will also know that no way was it justified – remember Sarkyn? There are going to be quite a lot more who have seen their relatives dragged off and worked to death in slave labour camps. I really really don't think that any of those people are going to accept "Pretty please, I'm sorry!" when the Inquisition starts to reform. I think it is more likely that trees, ridgepoles, and rafters will start to bear purple fruit – i.e. jerked (by the neck) Inquisitor. And that's if they're lucky. If their own torture tools are handy, it might take some of them a lot longer to quit their vale of tears.
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Re: HFQ Official Snippet #20
Post by PeterZ   » Wed Mar 25, 2015 10:09 am

PeterZ
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Posts: 6432
Joined: Fri Apr 01, 2011 1:11 pm
Location: Colorado

I tend to agree with you that the CoC won't likely have any influence over the CoGA short of complete victory resulting in capturing Zion.

My point is that if Clyntahn is held as the principal cause of the jihad, Duchairn and Magwair can conceivably blame him for instigating an unjust jihad. It was Clyntahn's abuse of power that forced Charis to separate from the CoGA and that continued abuse that has made mending the schism impossible at present.

So, in an effort to heal that schism the CoGA must reform itself. Reform must begin with the Inquisition. A reasonable place to start is to revert to the original separation of powers between defining heresy and prosecuting it. Yet, reform does not mean the abusers of power within the Inquisition are forgiven their excesses. Charges of Inquisition misconduct must be investigated. Representation of investigators must be distributed between Refromists, Loyalists and CoC clergy/representatives.

If the allies were offered something like this, enough would be interested that Cayleb and Sharley would have to enter negotiations.

lyonheart wrote:Hi PeterZ,

I agree the inner circle hasn't told everyone its ultimate plans, but I think the average CoC or reformist knows the CoGA has been corrupt for centuries, that the Go4 and Clyntahn are only symptoms of that corruption not recent aberrations, so the idea only the Inquisition needs some correction isn't going to be acceptable to any of them with a brain.

Given that Zhasyn Cahnyr was a member of the circle for around 20 years, and friends with all those that were killed and or tortured, which constantly waited for what it hoped would be its opportunity to fix things; I very strongly doubt that now when he has the power or influence to truly change the CoGA rather more than slightly or moderately, he's going to back off and and settle for promises to make the Inquisition better.

Getting the CoGA to accept the CoC and reformists, when the former has effectively disavowed the book of Schueler etc, would be very interesting if RFC were to follow your assumptions, but I don't think he has time in the story arc for such sub plots.

snip
L
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