cthia wrote:CRC wrote:I don't believe the context of the overheard comment goes either way as to a "defeat". But in a planet as heavily populated as Beowulf, 10M people could easily be killed by a Fractional C missile that gets past the defenses. But only one as several would cause many more than 10M dead.
The author could
conceivably allow two hits on planet, keeping the tally < 10M while also containing disbelief, just to make it more of a cliff hanger to us readers -- only to announce later in storyline that the two strikes were in relatively close proximity to each other and in the most sparsely populated of areas to boot. Too many more than that would probably funnel too much debris into the atmosphere.
Someone else is going to be a lot better able than I am to run the numbers, but a c-fractional missile colliding with Beowulf is likely to release far, far too much energy for a mere 10 million dead. For that little, it's got to be laserheads, c-trivial debris, chemicals, biologicals, a nuke, KEW's, etc.
Also, we must not overlook that amongst the dead could be a non-human tally as was the case with the treecats in the last planetary disaster. Gremlins on Beowulf are listed as slightly lower than treecats on the sentience scale.
At any rate, I wonder how much damage to Gremlins will be done.
I wonder too, but if they're not as smart as treecats, they're probably less advanced technologically, so if they are living on their own, their population - especially sharing whatever of Beowulf is left after the heavy human presence - is going to be very limited. If they're mixed up with the human population and sharing their resources (like domesticated animals and the scavengers that depend on us - rats, pigeons, etc.), their numbers may be vastly higher. They're still likely to be a tiny fraction of the human population, so 10 million dead may mean like 9.8 million humans and 200,000 gremlins.
And why is it so inconceivable that the GA could take one in the L column for once? Even if temporarily? My golly gumballs, let the League win ONE! Heck, with so many systems they could build LACs twice the size with powerful grasers. I don't know how they'd get them all there, but each system could build only 10 LACs and the League could seed a system with half a million of them running around like fireflies. LACs can be built quickly. They may not have time to duplicate the tech to make them smaller. But with those kinds of numbers and a powerful graser, would it matter?
USE that attritious margin!
2000 systems could build quite a lot, though they do suffer for having practically no warship building experience, practically no warship crewing experience, and practically hopeless fighting technology.
You may get the equivalent of human wave attacks with those circumstances. Human wave attacks do demand rather firmly motivated humans though, and the League member systems aren't firmly motivated. The League's Uncle Sam is voting to
secede, a quarter of the Assembly hasn't got a beef with Beowulf allying with the "enemy", and the League's bureaucrats dare not even call this a war.
The League may get a victory somewhere if it can ambush a wormhole picket inside the attackers' effective weapon ranges with overwhelming firepower. It still won't hold the field for long, and it's likely to suffer greater casualties out of that "victory" unless it's ridiculously overwhelming the picket - picture something only marginally more heroic than Byng's glorious victory at New Tuscany. You could cross your fingers for one of those successful picket ambushes happening at the Beowulf terminus - it's unlikely but not utterly incredible.
I'd not count on that SLN win-of-some-sort near the planet, barring some bizarre accident, GA commanders clutching the idiot ball, or Alignment intervention that somehow does not screw the SLN too.
RFC does not want to write war porn, but the balance of forces and capabilities means that he's got that as almost inevitable here in the Honorverse with the GA vs. SLN matchups and in Safehold. In Safehold, in the latest book, he managed that with at least three pieces of sheer bad luck for the good guys and caught some flack for it. In the next Honor book, well, weather and sand bars probably can't be relevant but I'm hoping GA setbacks can read as the result of enemies being effective rather than their officers being stupid or the universe giving them the finger.