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The ART of being reasonable

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Re: The ART of being reasonable
Post by Vince   » Fri Jul 29, 2016 10:58 am

Vince
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cthia wrote:It is still about reasonable expectations of Solarian perception, not about logical truths - an axiom that also continues to bewilder the GA.

Therefore, I respectfully disagree. In this case, it is the perception of the Dad that HE is the biggest bully on the block and defeating his kid doesn't mean that you can defeat him. The League's perception defaulted to "they defeated an informal dispatching of our might. We underestimated our opponent. They won a few battles but they can't seriously begin to think they can win the war against we who outmass them a hundred to one, etc., etc."

There are still officers in the League that would back a military operation against Manticore! It's an arrogant Solarian cancer of the marrow.

Frankly, if the RMN really wanted to invest in diplomacy, why didn't the first serious early negotiations include on chip demonstrations as evidence of the League military being thoroughly outclassed.

"Here's what our ships can do. If you still want to attack, that's your brain on drugs. Any questions?"

Armies have underestimated a qualitative advantage in the face of a quantitative advantage since the first two sperm fought each other for fertility rights.

Yet don't you think it a bit illogical to think that any bully will listen to your correspondence if HE thinks he outweighs and outguns you - even if you know he really doesn't?

Aside:
I'm trying to get my time in on the forum before the final and most important leg of my vacation which will be the better part of a month - to be spent in jolly ol' England with my wife's family.

Me own act of... marital diplomacy, you see.

Regarding the portion of your post I bolded.

It was done twice, to no avail. First in reporting what happened to Byng:
Mission of Honor, Chapter 1 wrote:“All right, Rajani. Approximately ninety minutes ago, we received a second note from the Manticorans. Under the circumstances, the fact that we decided to opt for a ‘reasoned and deliberate’ response to their original complaint—and refused to let anyone think we were allowing ourselves to be rushed by any Manticoran demands—may have been less optimal than we’d thought. I don’t imagine getting our response to their first note a couple of days after they banged off their second note to us is going to amuse Queen Elizabeth and her prime minister very much.
“And the reason they’ve sent us this second note is that when Admiral Gold Peak arrived in New Tuscany she issued exactly the demands the Manties had warned us about in their first note. She demanded that Byng stand down his ships and permit Manticoran boarding parties to sequester and examine their sensor data relative to the destruction of three of her destroyers. She also informed him that the Star Empire of Manticore intended to insist upon an open examination of the facts and intended to hold the guilty parties responsible under the appropriate provisions of interstellar law for the unprovoked destruction of their ships and the deaths of their personnel. And”—Kolokoltsov allowed his eyes to flip sideways to Abruzzi for a moment—“it would appear it wasn’t all part of some sort of propaganda maneuver on their part, after all.”
“I don’t—” Rajampet’s wrinkled face was darken and his eyes glittered with fury. “I can’t believe anyone—even Manties!—would be stupid enough to really issue demands to the Solarian Navy! They’d have to be out of—I mean, surely this Gold Peak couldn’t possibly have thought she’d get away with that? If Byng blew her damned ships into orbital debris, the only person she’s got to blame for it is—”
“Oh, he didn’t blow up any of her ships, Rajani,” Kolokoltsov said coldly. “Despite the fact that she had only six battlecruisers and he had seventeen, she blew his flagship into . . . ​what was it you called it? Ah, yes! Into ‘orbital debris.’ ”
Rajampet froze in mid-tirade, staring at Kolokoltsov in disbelief.
“Oh, my God,” Omosupe Quartermain said quietly.
Of everyone present, she and Rajampet probably personally disliked Manticorans the most. In Rajampet’s case, that was because the Royal Manticoran Navy declined to kowtow satisfactorily to the Solarian League Navy’s supremacy. In Quartermain’s case, it was because of how deeply she resented Manticore’s wormhole junction and its merchant marine’s dominance of the League’s carrying trade. Which meant, among other things, that she had a very clear idea of how much damage the Star Empire of Manticore could do the League’s economy if it decided to retaliate economically for Solarian aggression.
“How many ships did the Manties lose this time?” she continued in a resigned tone, clearly already beginning to reckon up the restitution the Star Empire might find itself in a position to extort out of the League.
“Oh, they didn’t lose any ships,” Kolokoltsov replied.
“What?” Rajampet exploded. “That’s goddammed nonsense! No Solarian flag officer’s going to roll over and take something like that without—!”
“In that case, Rajani, I recommend you read Admiral Sigbee’s report yourself. She found herself in command after Admiral Byng’s . . . ​demise, and the Manties were kind enough to forward her dispatches to us along with their note. According to our own security people, they didn’t even open the file and read it, first. Apparently they saw no reason to.”
This time, Rajampet was clearly bereft of speech. He just sat there, staring at Kolokoltsov, and the diplomat shrugged.
“According to the synopsis of Admiral Sigbee’s report, the Manties destroyed Admiral Byng’s flagship, the Jean Bart, with a single missile salvo launched from far beyond our own ships’ effective range. His flagship was completely destroyed, Rajani. There were no survivors at all. Under the circumstances, and since Admiral Gold Peak—who, I suppose I might also mention, turns out to be none other than Queen Elizabeth’s first cousin and fifth in line for the Manticoran throne—had made it crystal clear that she’d destroy all of Byng’s ships if her demands were not met, Admiral Sigbee—under protest, I need hardly add—complied with them.”
“She—?” Rajampet couldn’t get the complete sentence out, but Kolokoltsov nodded anyway.
“She surrendered, Rajani,” he said in a marginally gentler voice, and the admiral closed his mouth with a snap.

And then again with what happened to Crandall:
Mission of Honor, Chapter 31 wrote:The newsies who’d charged off to the Talbott Cluster to cover the New Tuscany incidents had gotten far more than they’d bargained for, he thought grimly. They’d come flooding home in their dispatch boats, racing to beat the Royal Manticoran Navy dispatches bearing word of the battle—and of Admiral O’Cleary’s surrender—back to Manticore. The first rumors of the catastrophe had actually reached the Old Earth media even before the latest Manticoran diplomatic note—this one accompanied by Admiral Keeley O’Cleary in person—reached Old Chicago.
Mission of Honor, Chapter 32 wrote:Then had come news of the Battle of Spindle. Despite all her own concerns, despite al-Fanudahi’s most pessimistic projections, the two of them had been shocked by the totality of the Manticoran victory. Not even they had anticipated that an entire fleet of superdreadnoughts could be casually defeated by a force whose heaviest unit was only a battlecruiser. That was like . . . ​like having a professional prizefighter dropped by a single punch from her own eight-year-old daughter, for God’s sake!
But if the two of them had been shocked, the rest of the Navy had been stunned. The sheer impossibility of what had happened was literally too much for the Navy’s officer corps to process.
The first reaction had been simple denial. It couldn’t have happened, therefore, it hadn’t happened. There had to be some mistake. Whatever the initial news reports might have seemed to indicate, the Manties had to have had a task force of their own ships-of-the-wall present!
Unfortunately for that line of logic (if it could be dignified by that description), the Manties appeared to have anticipated such a response. They’d sent Admiral O’Cleary herself home along with their diplomatic note, and they’d allowed her to bring along tactical recordings of the engagement.
Italics in the above quotes are the author's, boldface and underlined text is my emphasis.

After Spindle, the Mandarins were going to do the diplomatic dance with Manticore to play for time, then plow them under when the SLN had caught up technologically. Then came the Yawata Strike, and the Mandarins bought into Rajampet's (and the Malign's) plans to use Filareta to steamroller Manticore.
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History does not repeat itself so much as it echoes.
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Re: The ART of being reasonable
Post by cthia   » Fri Jul 29, 2016 12:30 pm

cthia
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Thanks specifically for that first passage Vince. It is amongst my favorites. I remember it all.

What I meant though, was why didn't very early on Manty negotiations include proof of concept of their superiority prior to any major battles being fought and before the diplomatic mix became, perhaps irrevocably, tainted with the additional unbridgeable elements of passion, pride and insensible political responsibilities? After the first Solarian ship was destroyed - with the League needing to maintain its appearance of invincibility - all diplomatic chances were lost. The League's hands were tied just as Eloise's were. After that first confrontation after Sigbees helpless ships were destroyed, many political and diplomatic paths open to the League were gone.

However, out of a sense of fairness, to play my own devil's advocate, I think that would have been rather presumptuous of the RMN, because they weren't really certain of their qualitative advantage until it was field tested. If I remember correctly, that task fell to Gold Peak when she stated against Byng that it was time the gloves come off and test their edge. That initial test salvo was against Byng and OFS ships. IIRC, a test against true Battle Fleet ships didn't arise until later with Crandall.

So until the jury came in for certain, the Manties could ill afford to give the gorilla an edge of foresight.

So, after further consideration, please allow me to recant that statement.

Son, your mother says I have to hang you. Personally I don't think this is a capital offense. But if I don't hang you, she's gonna hang me and frankly, I'm not the one in trouble. —cthia's father. Incident in ? Axiom of Common Sense
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Re: The ART of being reasonable
Post by Duckk   » Fri Jul 29, 2016 1:58 pm

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All of the following comes from a very long discussion on the Bar around the time of SftS's release, which should definitively clear up what Mike Henke was thinking:

Group: Snerkers Only
Author: davidweber
Date: Thu, 11 Sep 2008 23:40:32 GMT
Local: Thu, 11 Sep 2008 19:40:32 -0400

Peter, I'm sorry, but international perceptions just don't work that way. They simply don't.

Not firing the warning shot is not going to cause the SEM to fight a single star system it wasn't already going to have to fight. FIRING the shot wouuld not have dissuaded a single star system NOT to fight or changed its perception of who the agressor was in any way. Even if Mike had fired the famous warning shot, it would be totally -- and I mean TOTALLY -- lost in the ground clutter, short term, long term, or in the middle term. People who are willing to believe the SEM is in the right will be convinced that they ALREADY went the extra mile in warning Byng three separate times and in only firing on ONE of his ships; people who won't be convinced by what Mike already did will NEVER be convinced that the SEM was justified in ANYTHING it did or does which can be perceived as in any way contributing to the war. The SEM is never going to convince that crowd that they had any right do do anything beyond saying "Uh, excuse me, Massa, but did you really MEAN to kill all of our people? I mean, it's all right either way, of course, you being the SL and the master of the known universe and all, but we were just a little curious. If you feel like ansiwering us, go ahead. Otherwise, never mind. We'll just sit over here like obedient little neobarbs and mind our manners"

The issue here is whether or not what BYNG did was an act of war. It was. Any response which treats it as anything else, or which presents even the suspicion of weakness on the SEM's part, is ultimately the WRONG thing for Mike to do UNLESS the SEM has made the decision NOT to go to war against the SL NO MATTER WHAT PROVOCATION IS OFFERED. In fact, Elizabeth has already made the reverse decision, and her Navy ought to be perceived as hewing to that decision. They went absolutely as far -- indeed, possibly further -- than they ought to have gone, and there is no way in the universe that anything else they might have done would have affected ANYONE's view of war responsibility or the "mercifulness" of the SEM favorably.

There is a line between "trying to look like a nice guy" and looking weak. There is a line between "we took every step a REASONABLE person could have expected" and we "really, really, really tried to make nice to the people who already murdered three or four hundred f our naval personnel." And there is also the very accurate observation of Machiavelli that while it is good to be loved, it is even better to be feared. Diplomacy that strikes a reasonable note and is fairly and equittably approached and administered is fine. Treating defeated foes magnanimously and extending a helping hand to them after the smoke clears is absolutely sound policy. But first you DEFEAT them and demonstrate your own strength, show them that you are acting out of a genuine sense of fairness and statesmanship, not fear or perceived self-weakness. Looking like your cringing away from acting within the full, legal, RECOGNIZED scope of a star nation's right to self defense in the wake of an unprovoked act of war is NOT the way to have your diplomacy taken seriously by anyone. In fact, looking TOO merciful, TOO willing to "go the extra mile" is a very good way to be taken lightly -- the old "democracies are soft; you can tell because they're not willing to do what they should have done" calculus is still very much part of human nature and will be for as long as humans remain recognizably human.

Mike did the right thing.

***

Oops.

Sorry. I really didn't mean to get involved in this at all, and I think this post may sound just a bit more, ah . . . spirited than I intended it to. I started out drafting it more as an exercise than something I meant to post. Then I got into it and deicided I WAS going to post it. Then the phone rang, and it turned out we had two or three familial forest fires that needed pis--- er, putting out, and I got rushed and sent the whole thing off without proofing it and seeing whether or not it seemed too pointed in tone. If it did, I apologize.

At the same time, however, I stand by it. I only found out about the thread because Jophn mentioned it to me, and following his comments, he seems to have pretty ably (if, perhaps, a bit more forcefully a time or two than I would NORMALLY have phrased myself) summarized the arguments for what Michelle did. I would only add this.

As I already said in my post, nothing that Michelle did or didn't do at New Tuscany prior to actually firing on Admiral Byng's flagship is really going to have any bearing at all on any decisions which may be made in the Solarian League or any of its successor states. Zip. Nada. The fact that she pulled the trigger after DEMANDING that the Solarian League Navy comply with the Star Empire's demands is all that's really going to matter. No one is going to wonder about whether or not she should have fired a "warning shot" first. As John has already suggested, the practice of firing "warning shots" at warships of major stellar powers really has no place in the interstellar law of the Honorverse. Warning shots are fired, as a general rule, simply to demonstrate -- almost always to a merchant vessel or a suspected privateer or pirate, although perhaps on rare occasions it might also occur when you have a significantly more powerful warship underscoring its willingness to fire on the warship of a weaker star nation -- that the person firing the shot has not simply the ability but the intent to use potentially deadly force. Michelle had already made that abundantly clear, and simply firing a "warning shot" would have been construed (1) as an act of war involving deadly force or (2) a calculated insult to the Solarian League Navy, by relegating it to the standard of the weaker star nation or a suspected privateer, or even more likely (3) a combination of both.

In an immediate sense, firing a so-called warning shot would have been pointless where Josef Byng was concerned. In fact, a the "warning shot" would only have reinforced his belief that Michelle was basically bluffing, although admittedly there was no way that Michelle could have known that. What she did know was his record, the tenor and content of their own earlier conversations, the content and tone of his "conversation" with Commodore Chatterjee, and the fact that he hadn't even responded to her earlier messages but was heading out with the evident intent of offering battle or at least breaking past her ships and escaping. She didn't know exactly how effective her weapons were going to be (although she did anticipate that she would have a very significant qualitative edge), she had her orders which were to stop his ships by any means necessary, and she had absolutely no reason to believe that firing a warning shot would have produced any beneficial effect. And she was already convinced that Byng was party to use falsified sensor data against the Star Empire, which meant that even if she'd hired a "warning shot," the only records which would demonstrate that she had would be MANTICORAN ones which would undoubtedly be confronted by splendidly unofficial SOLARIAN records proving that she HADN'T, which would mean that her "spurious claim" to have done so would simply become one more propaganda point for the League's spinmeisters to use against the Star Empire. (And I suppose it's also worth pointing out that the Star Kingdom's experience with Solarian new services has been . . . less than pleasant since the very beginning of the Havenite wars. Why should she expect that to change at this point?)

In an intermediate sense, looking towards the future, Michelle's emphasis was quite rightly on what message she was going to send to the Solarian League Navy and to the bureaucrats running the League. The message she wanted to send to them was that the Royal Manticoran Navy was, indeed, prepared to embrace all-out war with the Solarian League if the League persisted in committing acts of war against Manticoran warships, territory, or citizens. She wanted them aware of the fact that the Royal Manticoran Navy does NOT "bluff" (which has always been a staple of Manticoran naval policy), and she wanted to make THEM aware of the fact that they held the short end of the hardware quality stick but to do it in a way which would preserve as much tactical surprise for the RMN as possible if the feared shooting war actually developed beyond this point.

In a long-ranged sense, looking to the more distant future and the possible question of how "merciful" or "bloodthirsty" the Royal Manticoran Navy is going to appear to current citizens of the Solarian League, Michelle had already gone much, much, much further than interstellar law required or custom demanded by giving Byng the OPPORTUNITY to comply with their demands in the first place, much less repeating the offer several times. Had JEAN BART been a vessel belonging to any other Navy in the galaxy, there would have been zero question of the propriety of her actions or of the distance she'd been prepared to go in the first place to avoid taking additional lives. The main difference between the Manties and anyone else in this case is that they are actually willing to take on the 8000-pound gorilla over a matter of principle . . . and, of course, the minor matter of the Sollies having slaughtered three or four hundred of the Queen's naval personnel without provocation, without warning, without any offer of the chance to surrender, and with no survivors.

Even if Michelle had had any reason to think ahead through the strategic analysis that Honor lays out for Elizabeth and the others later in the book, she STILL made the right decision. As John has been pointing out all along, there would be no way that Manticore could "win" in the public opinion contest simply because she'd chosen to fire a "warning shot" before opening fire in earnest. It's just not going to be a significant factor in any way when people start looking at the two sides a year or two down the road (assuming it comes to that). It isn't. What's going to be a significant factor is that (1) the Solarian League committed an unprovoked act of war in the neutral territory of a third party star nation; (2) the Star Empire of Manticore declined to let that act of war pass unchallenged; (3) Admiral Gold Peak gave Admiral Byng repeated opportunities to avoid any further exchanges of fire or loss of life; (4) Admiral Byng didn't even deign to reply, disregarded her demands, and headed directly towards her force; (5) Admiral Gold Peak destroyed a single ship, then gave the remainder of Admiral Byng's task group yet ANOTHER opportunity to comply with her initial demands without further loss of life; (6) after the action was over, Admiral Gold Peak was very careful to avoid any abuse of her POWs, or even to TREAT them as POWs; and (7) she kept only two of the Solarian ships as prizes, returning the others to Solarian possession (albeit with their electronics thoroughly disabled until repairs), DESPITE the fact that they had been participants in the massacre of her own Navy's destroyers. Anyone who isn't going to be swayed into recognizing the massive restraint the Manties exercised by all of THAT is most definitely not someone whose opinion would be swayed by the simple addition of a "warning shot." To be honest, the idea that they would be is fairly ludicrous.

As John has also ably, if somewhat forcefully, pointed out, what IS going to have an impact on long-term future public opinion in the Solarian League and any potential successor states is going to be how the Star Empire conducts itself after the war begins in earnest. If the Star Empire avoids trampling on the pride of its adversaries; if it acts rapidly and with compassion to pick up survivors and to avoid inflicting unnecessary casualties; if it respects the provisions of the Deneb Accords; if its diplomacy is directed towards reassuring people that it will treat even its ex-enemies with dignity and fairness in any negotiating process; if (as I believe Admiral Givens pointed out) it refrains from pressing predatory economic advantages; and if it adheres scrupulously to whatever treaty obligations it assumes, then it has a darn good chance of presenting itself as the "Good Guys"™ and the corrupt Solarian League (especially if it can demonstrate Mesan influence) as the "Bad Guys"™ in the only public opinion contest which is really going to matter.

I realize that those who are claiming that she should have fired the "warning shot" are arguing in effect that by not doing so she's "missed the opportunity" to seize the moral high ground from the outset. Frankly, it couldn't matter less. First because without getting into whether or not John's calculations on turnaround times for newsies are accurate, the fact is that the League is such an enormous dinosaur that the competing versions of what actually happened at New Tuscany are going to be chasing one another around the galaxy for years. It's going to be kind of like getting to mutually contradictory "facts" out onto the Internet; the "correct" fact simply can't catch up with and kill the "incorrect" fact. People are going to adhere to the one that they "know" is correct, and you're not going to be able to shake their conviction with anything short of a thermonuclear demolition charge. In that respect, yes, getting the Star Empire's version out first would seem to offer at least some advantages. But those advantages are all SHORT-TERM, not long-term, as some people seem to be arguing. The only real advantage in getting the Star Empire's version to Chicago first would lie in the way that it would affect the viewpoints of decision-makers . . . and the order in which the conflicting reports get to Chicago is going to have zero consequence for the viewpoints of those decision-makers. They don't care. It isn't their JOB to care, the way they see it. It's their job to make the most advantageous decision, and hang the facts and the morality of the decision OR its consequences. That's just the way it is in their universe, and there's not enough time for their fundamental view of the universe and of their place in that universe to change enough for them to be affected one way or the other by whether or not Michelle Henke fired a "warning shot." They're going to make their decision based on a lot of the same factors that Admiral Crandall used in making her decision, even if they are (hopefully, at least) a little less likely to allow immediate, unreasoning fury to factor into their decisions. But the truth is that they aren't really concerned with whether or not Admiral Byng killed several hundred "neobarb" spacers without provocation or good reason. After all, there are always plenty of more neobarbs where they came from. What they're going to be concerned about are the implications of Michelle's actions -- and their response to those reactions -- when it comes to setting precedent for the League's and, specifically, for the SLN's relations with ALL neobarb, second rate navies. And, almost inevitably, they are going to come to the same conclusion that Crandall did: that it would be catastrophic for the League to allow Michelle's actions to set a precedent which would hold the League accountable to SOMEONE ELSE, regardless of the circumstances. And that the way to avoid that catastrophic outcome is simply to go ahead and snuff out the Star Empire of Manticore, using their stupendous numerical, financial, and industrial edge to offset any trivial technological superiority the Manties may fleetingly enjoy. It would hardly be the first time that OFS and its allies in the diplomatic and military bureaucracies had done the same thing, after all.

In the long run, everything else gets lost in the ground clutter. Certainly any advantage which might have accrued by firing a completely unnecessary "warning shot" that neither law nor custom demanded of Michelle would be totally inconsequential beside the far more substantial and substantive issues and precedents that are going to be thrown up and set in the ensuing warfare. Any such advantage, at the very best, is totally inconsequential and utterly unimportant compared to the message (as summarized above) that she wanted to send directly to the Solarian League Navy and the bureaucrats behind it. And by acting as she did, she sent the CORRECT message as unambiguously as possible.

Whether or not her intended recipients read it correctly or not, is, of course, beyond her control. But, again, as John says: in my opinion, Michelle did the right thing. No one is required to agree with me, of course, but at the moment, at least, I think I've got a better feel for how the consequences are going to play out than anyone else does. [G]

***

Sorry, Peter. I already posted an apology for my, ah . . . forcefulness elsewhere.

I don't disagree with you at all that magnanimity is going to be as important as force IF the SEM is going to pursue the policy Honor sketched out to Elizabeth. (And which I happen to think gives them the best chance of survival in the short term and the best chance of achieving a relatively [note the adverb] stable and prosperous peace following the break up of the League.) That, I think, is a given. Where I've taken exception to certain logic chains is in the belief that a warning shot at New Tuscany would have contributed in any way to that perception of magnanimity. Part of it, I think, is that if it were that easy to create the right perceptions, then the war would never have happened in the first place. It's HARD to create that sort of perception while at the same time doing what one has to do to (a) survive and (b) convince people not to adopt policies which are going to be inimical to one's own essential policy goals. George Kennan's strategy for the Cold War was right and relatively easy to sumarize; it was extremely DIFFICULT to put into practice with any sort of consistency. (Clausewitz, anyone?) Winning the PR war isn't all that hard if one side is kind enough to operate genocidal extermination camps, experiment on prisoners, shoot women and children, execute POWs on sight, and raze entire cities to the ground for deying it. Well, when that happens and the other side can get the story out and have anyone believe it, anyway. Winning the PR war under other circumstances is HARD. Remember that even at the height of WWII there were still people who referred to it as "Mr. Roosevelt's War" and felt we should have stayed the heck home rather than mucking around in something that was none of our business. Well, okay, deal with the Japanese if you have to, following that unpleasantness in Hawaii, but even THAT was FDR's fault for gratuitously irritating Nippon, when you came right down to it.

My point was simply that warning shots, which are not really an applicable part of the Honorverse laws or customs of war in the first place, would have disappeared without a ripple into the way the entire Manty response is portrayed/observed/interpreted within the existing League (where the initial post-League viewpoints of war guilt and bloodthirstiness are going to be formed) and that the opinion shaping you are rightly positing as necessary is going to have to be done later through other policies and approaches AFTER the fecal mnatter hits the rotary air impeller.

And the corollary to the point above is that in the short term, purely as a military commander responding to a militarty situation and obeying her instructions from her superiors, Mike Henke (whose judgment some people appeared to be questioning) did precisely what she was supposed to do and sent precisely the right message -- "Hey! Don't think you can get away with killing Manticoran citizens without being held accountable and, oh, by the way, we've got enough of a qualitative edge to hurt you really, REALLY badly if you decide you want to push it anyway" -- to the SLN and the bureaucrats.

I'm not saying it was a perfect decision or that it had a perfect outcome; only that it was the BEST decision available to her and that it had the LEAST IMPERFECT outcome she could hope to achieve. If there'd been a "perfect" solution, then no one in the SEM would be worrying about fighting a war with an incredibly powerful star nation so stupid and corrupt it's allowing itself to be manipulated by MESA, for goodness sake!
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Shields at 50%, taunting at 100%! - Tom Pope
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Re: The ART of being reasonable
Post by Brigade XO   » Fri Jul 29, 2016 2:26 pm

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Warning shots are just fine as long as there is some reasonable prospect that it will be recognized for what it is....a warning, and that might do some good. Putting a shot across another ship's bow is a warning. Driving a major task force of SD's into a system on an attack profile with is NOT a warning. It is as clear statement of intent as if Crandall had broadcast a surrender demand to Spindle and all RMN forces when she broke out of hyperspace. She wan't interested in talking, just smashing.

Having a task force of SD plus escorts and fleet train show up and drive for the political center of an entire sector is not something that is going get ANY use out of fireing a "warning shot" from the defending forces. Crandall was comming in in force, with what appeared -to her- as an overwhelming force and that was intended (or could be presumed to be intended by the defenders) as a choice of surrender (which she might not honor), try to flee, or just die.

Mike's responce is also clear and correct. Once they cross the hyper limit, kill as many as possible, as quickly as possible with the least damage to the RMN forces. Case closed.
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Re: The ART of being reasonable
Post by Loren Pechtel   » Fri Jul 29, 2016 3:17 pm

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caias wrote:I might argue that they didn't *have* to call on the nonexistent brother. They did that primarily to encourage Filareta to surrender instead of dying horribly, not because there was any doubt about victory. I don't think any of us have much doubt that Honor's 40 SDs with Apollo System Defense Pods and LACs out the wazoo would have still dumpstered 11th fleet if push had come to shove.

In fact, given that Filareta fired anyway, in retrospect, it might have been more emphatic for the Sollies if Grayson and the RHN hadn't been there, and it may or may not have changed their diplomatic thinking. Or not, who can know with those apparatchiks.


The thing is the Mandarins know the GA has total military superiority but they can't back down anyway because doing so means the breakup of much of the Solarian Empire--especially the systems that actually produce money that funds the government. They're trying desperately to avoid the collapse of their power (and probably trying to save their skins in the process--if they fall they won't be able to cover up all their misdeeds.)
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Re: The ART of being reasonable
Post by Jonathan_S   » Fri Jul 29, 2016 3:32 pm

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cthia wrote:Thanks specifically for that first passage Vince. It is amongst my favorites. I remember it all.

What I meant though, was why didn't very early on Manty negotiations include proof of concept of their superiority prior to any major battles being fought and before the diplomatic mix became, perhaps irrevocably, tainted with the additional unbridgeable elements of passion, pride and insensible political responsibilities? After the first Solarian ship was destroyed - with the League needing to maintain its appearance of invincibility - all diplomatic chances were lost. The League's hands were tied just as Eloise's were. After that first confrontation after Sigbees helpless ships were destroyed, many political and diplomatic paths open to the League were gone.
When would you suggest? They can't show how vulnerable SLN ships are until they engage SLN ships.

They sent that information the very first time they engaged them - right after Byng refused to stand down when Gold Peak confronted him about blowing away, without warning, the defenseless (orbiting with wedges down) RMN DDs.

The only point to provide proof of military superiority would be to send it basically as soon as Lynx terminus was discovered - before there were any confrontations with the SLN. But then what can you send? Simulation results against the SLN fights - dismissed as faked/impossible weapons. Combat clips of Buttercup? - dismissed as beating up on some other Neobarb.

There really wasn't a point prior to the confrontation with Byng and his BCs where the RMN ended up in combat against the SLN. And when they sent that info the SLN quadrupled down by sending Crandal's battle squadrons to Spindle. And when they send the info of how badly that turned out the SLN tripled down again by sending Filereta to Manticore...
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Re: The ART of being reasonable
Post by Weird Harold   » Fri Jul 29, 2016 3:54 pm

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Jonathan_S wrote:There really wasn't a point prior to the confrontation with Byng and his BCs where the RMN ended up in combat against the SLN. And when they sent that info the SLN quadrupled down by sending Crandal's battle squadrons to Spindle. And when they send the info of how badly that turned out the SLN tripled down again by sending Filereta to Manticore...


The SLN didn't send Adm Crandall and couldn't have recalled her if they had known her intentions -- even if they had been so inclined. Adm Crandall attacked Spindle under standing orders/contingency plans. The distance from Sol meant there wasn't time for consultations with, or orders from, Sol.

The Mandarins and Rajampet did send Filareta's fleet and had ample opportunity to reconsider -- and several diplomatic requests from Manticore to avert the attack.

Being reasonable with the League doesn't seem to be effective. Manticore has gone far beyond what is simply reasonable with no effect.
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Answers! I got lots of answers!

(Now if I could just find the right questions.)
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Re: The ART of being reasonable
Post by cthia   » Fri Jul 29, 2016 4:19 pm

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Jonathan_S wrote:
cthia wrote:Thanks specifically for that first passage Vince. It is amongst my favorites. I remember it all.

What I meant though, was why didn't very early on Manty negotiations include proof of concept of their superiority prior to any major battles being fought and before the diplomatic mix became, perhaps irrevocably, tainted with the additional unbridgeable elements of passion, pride and insensible political responsibilities? After the first Solarian ship was destroyed - with the League needing to maintain its appearance of invincibility - all diplomatic chances were lost. The League's hands were tied just as Eloise's were. After that first confrontation after Sigbees helpless ships were destroyed, many political and diplomatic paths open to the League were gone.
When would you suggest? They can't show how vulnerable SLN ships are until they engage SLN ships.

They sent that information the very first time they engaged them - right after Byng refused to stand down when Gold Peak confronted him about blowing away, without warning, the defenseless (orbiting with wedges down) RMN DDs.

The only point to provide proof of military superiority would be to send it basically as soon as Lynx terminus was discovered - before there were any confrontations with the SLN. But then what can you send? Simulation results against the SLN fights - dismissed as faked/impossible weapons. Combat clips of Buttercup? - dismissed as beating up on some other Neobarb.

There really wasn't a point prior to the confrontation with Byng and his BCs where the RMN ended up in combat against the SLN. And when they sent that info the SLN quadrupled down by sending Crandal's battle squadrons to Spindle. And when they send the info of how badly that turned out the SLN tripled down again by sending Filereta to Manticore...

Again, I concur. It is a catch 22. Yet, the point of this thread is the "questionable" reasonable expectations, at every turn, that the GA put in their attempts at diplomacy. They knew what they were up against, who they were up against and shouldn't have been so exasperated when diplomatic attempts failed. No one ever accused the League of having a brain or of being short on arrogance.

There was no way that the RMN could allow the incident regarding Sigbee to go unchallenged. Yet, to answer your question, that was the only chance of a diplomatic resolution, IMO. Yet, considering present company, the RMN knew where that would lead. IF what the RMN wanted was to avoid a war then they would have had to be willing to eat crow and the murder of their fellow citizens. They weren't, nor should have been.

Yet, as a result don't be so bewildered when the not so bright bully of a child that is accustomed to always getting what they want (and has a bigger political picture of their own to consider) won't listen to reason and keeps doing the same thing over and over until you smack him.


"You knew I was a snake before you picked me up." You can't reason with a snake. And even less with a very biiiig one. An attempt at diplomacy was fine and noble and at least morally required as my initial post acknowledges. Yet, when it fails, then tell yourself 'par for the Solarian snake.' Yet, that isn't what storyline presents us. We are presented with an actual emotional frustration of the GA at every turn that diplomacy wasn't working. Not just because they wanted to prevent needless killing, but because they truly can't (still) wrap their brains around why. The League's arrogance and perception that it has a bigger hammer, and the fact that they are morally corrupt and just doesn't want to see reason escapes them.


Remember the movie "Independence Day" when The president wanted to negotiate (diplomacy) with the alien conquerors?

"What is it you want us to do?"

"Diiie"


To the League, negotiations (diplomacy) was not an option. The alien cut to the chase, the president then acted accordingly. The League is speaking the same thing. Yet, the GA isn't getting it. https://youtu.be/2Rw5MosKRm4

Son, your mother says I have to hang you. Personally I don't think this is a capital offense. But if I don't hang you, she's gonna hang me and frankly, I'm not the one in trouble. —cthia's father. Incident in ? Axiom of Common Sense
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Re: The ART of being reasonable
Post by cthia   » Fri Jul 29, 2016 4:41 pm

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@ Duckk, Brigade XO => Absofrigginlutely! Both posts underscore the overarching premise of this thread...
It is still about reasonable expectations of Solarian perception and arrogance, not about logical truths.

In Michelle's instance, she acted according to that reasonable truth. Both Byng and Crandall were loaded for bear. A warning shot is a form of psychological diplomacy in itself. Yet both SL fleets had a decisive quantitative edge in their minds for certain (they also probably thought their tech was superior). You cannot expect diplomacy to work in that instance. Again, the weight of your diplomacy equals the enemies' perceived weight of your fleet (considering that qualitative advantage carries its own weight as well - a truth the Havenites learned the hard way). The SL hadn't learned that yet, therefore, in both SL commanders' perception - their weight didn't. So balance the scales with a demonstration. With the destruction of Byng then the remaining ships listened. Michelle knew that. So any attemps at diplomacy by a warning shot would have been insane and met with "pound sand" - unless that demonstration fire pounded ship(s) into orbital debris. Presto, I've got your attention now! And the lines of diplomacy are magically open. Certain death has a way of focusing ones thoughts and seeing is believing.

Neither came to talk. They came to fight. Michelle DID fire a warning shot - she only destroyed one ship belonging to the idiot-instigator Byng. I think the remaining ships took that as a very serious warning!

Besides, Michelle recognized that it was time to take the gloves off. It really was time. The RMN needed to know for certain its advantage. She owed that to her fellow spacers and Star Empire. And what better warning shot could have been fired than a warning shot to the Solarian government! Both incidences accomplished that far more profound warning shot across the Mandarins bow - for what little good it did.

Knowing both CO's dossiers, it wouldn't have been reasonable for Michelle to fire a warning shot. Especially considering - along with those dossiers - Solarian arrogance and Solarian perception which, in both instances, was that they had the bigger hammer!

Besides! The RMN cannot allow the League to be self absolved of murder! That would be opening the door to a case-of-cans of worms.

Having said all that. After any Solarian fleet faces off against you, is not a time for diplomacy (warning shots are diplomatic actions with threat of promise.) It is okay to attempt a diplomatic action yet not be emotionally vested in it - overcome by bewilderment when it falls on deaf&dumb ears. Especially considering present company!

Son, your mother says I have to hang you. Personally I don't think this is a capital offense. But if I don't hang you, she's gonna hang me and frankly, I'm not the one in trouble. —cthia's father. Incident in ? Axiom of Common Sense
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Re: The ART of being reasonable
Post by Rincewind   » Sat Jul 30, 2016 12:41 pm

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drinksmuchcoffee wrote:The diplomatic efforts by Manticore weren't just for the League's benefit. Even if there was a low probability of success, they had to try.

They were fighting for their very life against the Republic of Haven. If the Government's actions at that time made it look like, during that very war, they decided to pursue a war against the League as well most of the citizens would conclude that the Government had taken leave of its senses, and rightly so. So they had to pursue at least some form of diplomacy because of public opinion back home.

Another reason to pursue diplomacy is to make it clear to all of the League systems that this war wasn't Manticore's idea, and that they certainly didn't want a war. That will likely pay off down the road and may well get some League systems to switch sides, or at least decide to sit out the war.

Finally, diplomacy didn't really cost Manticore that much. They sent back Sigbee and O'Cleary after New Tuscany and Spindle, and Carmichael did the kabuki theater thing with the Mandarins, but they didn't really have to give anything up to pursue diplomacy.


It's not just for the League Systems, it was also for the benefit of all the Non-aligned systems. Yes, they probably knew that it was doomed to failure but, as several posters have already said, they had to at least try. If they did not then future generations would have castigated them for being too readily eager to resort to military action & that could have caused problems with other star nations not trusting them any more.

The problem with being the reasonable one; (which Manticore is clearly viewed as being, at least amongst the non-aligned worlds) is that sometimes that you have to at least act reasonable even when it is not in your immediate best interests.
Last edited by Rincewind on Fri Aug 12, 2016 7:33 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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