Louis R wrote:I think it's a pretty good guess.
Don't have electronic copies to search, but IIRC it's mentioned that Harless' force was essentially the troops that could be assembled and marched north in time to meet the projected invasion date [and I'm inclined to think they were late, at that]. You'll notice that Harless, Hankey and Hennet are all northern territories, for one thing, so they got the jobs in part because they were around as well as senior enough.
Well - if officers in the IDA move around a bit (hey, they're on horses naturally!), it could be that the northern territories have a disproportionate number of officers prepared to go toe-to-toe with Siddarmark as a matter of tradition and inclination and that's the primary reason that northern nobles are senior leaders in this expedition. Being already nearby isn't going to matter too much if they're not actual leaders of a classic feudal levy, and Desnair has put that behind it.
I'm not sure why, but I have the feeling that the AoJ was roughly 1/2 Desnairian army, although it included all their decent artillery, such as it was and what there was of it. Given how expensive horses are, a standing force half the size of the RSA could easily be pushing the limits of Desnair's carrying capacity, which is consistent with Harless having about half of it with him.
If it's a matter of what could arrive by or near the due date, it's possible there's a similar second echelon coming up behind. We've not heard about that, while we have heard about them in the case of Harchong. It's plausible we've not heard about a second similar Desnairian force on the way north because life is short and Safehold books are not already, but it could also mean that there
wasn't such a second force, which in turn would support the idea that the IDA isn't as large as you'd thought.
BTW, I'd say that the internal-security role of the IDA is being overstated by some. Mahrys's nobility is not nearly as fractious as, say, Henry the Fowler's, and the mainstays of the officer corps anyway. A lot of the work of 'keeping them down on the farm' - to the degree this is necessary, which is probably being exaggerated - is likely done by the landlords' personal retainers anyway. It's not the Army that's keeping the central government in power [AAMOF, that's much more true in Chisholm than Desnair], and using it for interesting military things isn't going to be that big a strain.
Probably. On the other hand, what's been the case in Desnair traditionally may be less the case now. Imperial authority has taken it on the nose. The Desnairian Navy feared to go out on the water and was burned out in port, after fabulous expense. The IDA - either a huge part of it or at least the available northern cream of it - has been outmaneuvered, outgunned, and is streaming away (and not even directly toward home) as refugees under the slight protection of Dohlar. Restive popular elements are going to think of this as an opportunity. Restive nobles are going to think that the Emperor, or his current ministers, are reasonably replaced "for the good of the Empire". And if the Inquisition can be convinced to lay the blame for it on any person or group currently in power, they will back a plausible successor.
Under those conditions, if the Army can be counted on to keep the Emperor's boot on whoever's neck, the Army is going to be something the Emperor and ministers will want ready at hand at home.
I'm not claiming that the Empire is about to fall apart like a house of cards in a stiff wind. I'm just saying that, however sturdy the Empire is, these
are stiff wind conditions politically.