HB of CJ wrote:In rejecting the obvious for the desirable and climbing on board a popular bandwagon just because ... well just because ... well just because IT FEELS SO GOOD to be all playing the same tune ... even when it is dead dead wrong, seems to litter the wayside with the hard facts of numbers, potential and the naggy reminders of world history.
... Oh gosh. The Mother of all run on sentences!!! Augghhhhh! My bad!
I'm sorry. Can I have a cookie please?
Just hand waving will not make something true or concrete only because the hand waving feels so good. Or in this case feeling good about existing storyline. Ignoring the hard facts regarding the INDUSTRIAL POTENTIAL of the Sollie core and verge systems will be done at many reader's peril. We will see what Mr. Weber does with this.
Sounds like to me that lots of folks here want just to rearrange the sliding deck chairs of the Titanic and sing hymnals along with the ship's string quartet when instead it might be a very good idea to instead start shoving and pushing real hard looking for that very first available empty lifeboat .... right now!
OH GAWD!!! Did it again. Opps!!
Nobody is trying to argue that if the League stayed together as a coherent unified entity long enough to get its act together, that it couldn't level the playing field militarily and take advantage of its size. However, the League is not a coherent unified entity - and it never was one in the first place. The League is loosely held together mostly by inertia, and doesn't what we'd call a strong central identity or government. There's no real loyalty to the Solarian League - loyalties are largely to local systems.
The League is more fragmented than the original 13 colonies under the Articles of Confederation. The League Constitution is a lot closer to them than it is to the Constitution of the United States.
For that matter, that's exactly what Honor's trying to prevent with the Harrington Doctrine. Take advantage of the League's lack of cohesion to break chunks of it off to the point that the "League" is no more, to break the League into a lot of much smaller regional successor states or local alliances and bind those successor states into a network of diplomatic agreements. Those regional successor states would be small - most would probably only be a few systems to a couple dozen - but no one, or probably even several, of them would be larger enough to represent a serious threat.
Breaking up the League isn't just something Manticore is planning to do on its own. Breaking up the League is something the MAlign wants to happen and is already helping make happen. Breaking away from the League is something that Barregos and Rozak are making preparations for without the MAlign pushing them towards it - he's actually going to be a form of cover for the OFS sector governors they have been pushing and priming to break away from the League.
Nobody is saying that the League doesn't have a lot of industrial potential.
However, the vast majority of that potential is just that - potential, unrealized potential - and a great deal of that is actively suppressed potential.
It would probably take roughly five years at a minimum for that potential to start being realized. However, that would be for a currently up to date League technology level and standards of realization. It would not be realization on par with Manticoran realization.
In addition, the League and/or its successor states are probably at least a decade of R&D, quite probably a fair amount further, away from MDMs - the MAlign's been working on trying to get MDMs ever since Manticore first used them, and the MAlign's been failing. And that's not even considering the amount of R&D required for the other Manticoran advances and advantages.
Manticore's put over half of century into pushing its R&D as far and as hard as it could - plus over a decade of wartime levels of R&D. It is going to take a while before the League or its successor states manage to catch up with Haven's deployed tech levels.
The Grand Alliance probably has a minimum of five years to break the League into smaller states with near-absolute impunity. Breaking the League into smaller states isn't going to take that long - more likely a year, maybe two at most.
And Manticore has a lot of expansion potential beyond the Manticoran home system as well. There's Manticoran Silesia, and the Talbott Quadrant - for that matter, there's plenty of potential in Trevor's Star and elsewhere in the Old Star Kingdom. Once Manticore expands the realization of that potential, it's going to be even harder to pose a successful military challenge to Manticore. Say each of those systems outside the Old Star Kingdom can support expanding the RMN by a force roughly equivalent in size to somewhere between the Protector's Own and all of the GSN plus the Own, once their potential's been established. Call it half the GSN and Own as an average. Before Apollo and Keyhole 2, Grayson is/was fielding perhaps the third or fourth most powerful fleet in existence, and probably around the fifth or sixth for size. In terms of power, I'm not sure whether the Andermani or Grayson has the edge, and in terms of size, I think Erewhon's probably up there as well.
Me? I think that the League is going to be broken into tiny pieces before Manticore even starts building its next superdreadnought in the home system.
The League is going to go the way of Humpty-Dumpty - and it's already fallen off the wall.