n7axw wrote:TBird50 wrote:I can't see Thirsk and Dohlar going the neutrality route. There is a lot to recommend it, probably, but they are just too important to the story to just fall to the side.
Neutrality is probably the best option for Dohlar if it can be pulled off. The politics of actually changing sides would be too unsettling. Now that could change if as a result of their attempt to opt out of the war, they found themselves confronted with a TL army. That presents us with the rather interesting scenario of Rychtyr and Hanth teaming up to protect Dohlar's territorial integrity. Wouldn't that be fun...
I suspect, though, that the COGA will have more immediate concerns than Dohlar by summer.
Don
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This isn't a kind of war that recognizes a principled, up-front neutrality. It's about the authority of the Temple at this point: either you recognize it or you reject it. You can try to append asterisks to that recognition, like Desnair, Silkiah, and the Raven Lands have in various ways, but your ability to do that is subject to Church willingness to let you and ability to stop you, and your own domestic political will to embrace a certain weaselly position.
The Church may not be well able to intervene in Dohlar from outside, and Dohlaran willingness to go along with more demands that they offer up their sons and husbands for human sacrifice has to be coming to an end.
The trouble with the weaselly positions that opt out of the war (or out of the embargo, in pre-Sword Silkiah's case) is that it undermines the authority and dignity of the sovereign. You're not really expressing an effective public policy clearly with that kind of two-faced dealing. Desnair's a bit rickety, and that policy exposes court factionalism. The Raven Lands leadership isn't all that powerful anyway - it's an exercise in herding cats - so a figleaf of Temple semi-compliance suffices for them domestically. And everyone in Silkiah knew that pursuing Silkiah's interests meant doing do while theoretically submitting to outside demands: it's the way the poor state was set up, as a demilitarized compromise among Siddarmark, Desnair, and Zion.
I don't see Dohlar as being able to do that. It's a working monarchy. Granted, it's a working monarchy despite the monarch and even despite the opinions among his counselors. But it's got the honor and expectations of a unified, sovereign state, and Clyntahn is demanding that it knuckle under in a specific sort of way that means abandonment of that. If they're going to reject the Temple, they're going to have to do it clearly - they're going to have to be an Emerald, Tarot, or Chisholm, not a Desnair, Silkiah, or Raven Lands.