One thought that I had on "followers of Kau-yung" was that we know Kau-yung planned to nuke Langhorne but what evidence did the survivors have on who nuked Langhorne?
Perhaps one of the reasons for the War Between The Angels is that some of the angels didn't believe Kau-yung was guilty but blamed Chihiro and/or Schueler.
After all, it would be seen as "interesting" that they weren't at the meeting that got nuked.
It would seem to me that Kau-yung's "troops" would be very likely in the group that believed he was innocent of nuking Langhorne so would oppose Chihiro and Schueler.
Since, they were trained military, they would likely be in the forefront of those opposing Chihiro and Schueler.
Thus "followers of Kau-yung" would be the understandable term to use.
By the way, wasn't there something in an earlier snippet about Langhorne *not* involved in the Alexandria strike?
Perhaps, Kau-yung's nuke happened before Langhorne "mournfully" informed the other angels about "what he had to do".
The Word Of Weber is that Langhorne hide his plans for the Orbital Weapon from all of the other angels.
Nobody knew about it before the Alexandria attack.
Perhaps, the "rebels" didn't believe that Langhorne attacked Alexandria but believed that Chihiro and Schueler were responsible.
Kytheros wrote:DrakBibliophile wrote:My question
would be "are they are actually Kau-yung's forces or is that just what they were called?"
Exactly what I was going to ask.
Everyone who was on the loosing side who wasn't 'rehabilitated' back to the winning side would have been written in the official histories as a follower of Shan-wei or Kau-yung. History is, after all, written by the victors.
I suspect that the fighting between the nuke survivors didn't start immediately, and there was some measure of widely agreed upon statements made, officially placing the blame on Shan-wei and Kau-yung. Thus, most, if not all, the surviving 'Angels' would have been painting their opponents' factions as those who were in support of Kau-yung and Shan-wei, in order to retain popular support.
Some, namely those who actually supported Kau-yung, would have tried to lay blame specifically at the feet of their opponents, rather than saying they were followers of the traitors Kau-yung and Shan-wei and therefore evil.