Hildum wrote:With the end of OAR and the success of Charis in repelling the invasion sponsored by the Knights of the Temple Lands, he and the rest of the Group of Four were operating in a sense in the "real world" for the first time, and the limits of their power, and particularly Clyntahn's, were revealed. He is off balance, and has been for most of the series, trying to use what levers of power he has or thinks he has, with limited or no success, except for the Sword and Rakuri, both of which were ultimately irrelevant or unsuccessful.
He's also, I think, off-balance because the key Inquisition role of enforcing the Proscriptions has been practically cast aside: anyone can see that lots of innovation that is supposedly demonically-inspired on the other side can be approved as just fine on the Church side, for the needs of the jihad. The Inquisition is effectively saying that their core role in peacetime is usually unnecessary, and "dangerous" innovation is dangerous solely because the Inquisition doesn't like it and will come get you for it - if the armed people it taps to do the threatening heavy-lifting comply.
I don't think Clyntahn's unaware of that, which just makes him more sour, more inclined to hurt people for relief, and more inclined to hurt them to renew the Inquisition's power through fear.
Magwair on the other hand, rose within the ranks as a political actor, but as it is turning out actually can be an effective military leader, and is recognized as such by the more intelligent officer core, who also recognize the constraints he is dealing with.
Prior to the current unpleasantness, the Temple Guard wasn't one of the movers and shakers in the Temple's upper echelons. Magwair's appointment surely owed a lot to political connections, but he's never been in the league of the other three members of the Group of Four for political maneuvering. I think his position leading the Temple Guard owes at least something to an interest and a competence in the Temple Guard's traditional security operations. Given how much difference there is between those and the operations of the Army (much less
Navy) of God, that's not a perfect professional background for what he's doing now, but it's vastly better than, say, Trynair's would be for running them. In a way, he's risen to the
political aspects of his position - having the confidence and cunning to handle Clyntahn as well as he's been able - as much as to the military leadership ones.
The finance position has always required competence, and the church would not let a purely political actor there - they actually have to know what they are doing. Being a good priest is of course of no consequence for that role. Might be a nice to have if anyone bothered to think about it, which I doubt, and many others would share Clyntahn's attitude that caring for the poor is a waste of resources.
Chances are someone who'd cared that much about that would have been shunted into a role where he wasn't wielding that much power, and would have been happy to be there and been able and expected to use what power he did have the way he wanted to. Duchairn being able to do what he cares to - in that regard, at least - with the resources under his control may owe a lot to the lateness of his moral regeneration.
The old, genially corrupt Church wouldn't have let the monster Clyntahn get where he is - he's far, far too removed from the genial bit! - but it wouldn't've let the saintly-enough Duchairn in his either - not corrupt enough. Magwair's poise and skills wouldn't've been a problem, but they wouldn't've had an outlet either. Trynair's the only one who would still be at home in that Church, and he's the one who's least at home in the one he helped create.
Trainer is of course a pure politician, but also a bit more aware of the secular issues at hand. Had he had more backbone, he should have realized the potential outcome of an order to destroy Charis and perhaps prevented it.
Yeah, but Clyntahn arranged the shock and surprise of his "revelation" of things stinking in Charis to keep the others from having the time or balance to step back and think.
It probably also helped that the Out Islands had been nearly off the Temple's radar for so long. Otherwise - and if the Temple hadn't been so confident and satisfied - the Temple Guard, Temple diplomatic corps, and Treasury may have had their own information sources out there to tell a different story.