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The ART of being reasonable

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Re: The ART of being reasonable
Post by Rincewind   » Tue Aug 23, 2016 3:45 pm

Rincewind
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cthia wrote: Why can't you let those ships go home? Remember, you didn't even want them to come. At the diplomatic table you were trying to talk your way out of them being sent. You then sent them a note giving them one last time to reconsider sending them and to send the recall order. So why exactly is it that the RMN can't choose to divert them anyway (in an even stronger diplomatic fashion by non-diplomatic means), when they arrive? With one last final diplomatic attempt to get them to see reason, by showing them what reason will avoid? Without backing them into a corner.

So they get away with their entire fleet. And on top of it we allow them to use their magic lamp and its three wishes.
1. We are allowed to hyper out.
2. We are allowed to keep our ships.
3. We are allowed to be repatriated.
4. We double our ships.

Oops, they got away with a serious extra wish. So what? Is the GA shaking in their boots?


This scenario was discussed at the highest levels of the Grand Alliance & it was both White Haven AND Honor who argued that it was not in Manticore's or, indeed the Grand Alliance's best interests to just let Filareta's Fleet turn around & retreat. The textev for this is as follows:

“Actually,” White Haven said. “I’m not at all sure letting Filareta stand down at this point would be in our interest.”
There was a moment of absolute silence, with every set of eyes turning to him. Except for Honor’s, that was. Unlike any of the others, she (and Emily) had already discussed this with their husband, and while she was not certain she shared his and Emily’s logic completely, she was certain she agreed with what he was about to propose.
“Perhaps you’d care to explain that, My Lord?” Eloise Pritchart invited after a moment, topaz eyes narrowed intently.
“Of course, Madam President.” White Haven looked around the conference table. “It’s possible Filareta really does have a secret clause directing him to back off if it turns out he’s likely to get reamed. It’s also possible that even without any such clause, he’d be smart enough to do it anyway. But if he does, and he just turns around and sails back off homeward without a shot being fired, where does that leave us?”
“Well, to begin with,” Mikulin observed. “It leaves a lot of people alive who’d be dead otherwise. And it pretty conclusively demonstrates that their navy can’t stand up to Manticoran weapons technology.”
“Does it?” White Haven asked. “Demonstrate they can’t stand up to our weapons, I mean?”
“Excuse me?” Mikulin looked perplexed, not incredulous, and White Haven shrugged again.
“What happened to Crandall’s already demonstrated that to anyone with a working IQ,” he pointed out. “Despite which, they’ve sent this entire fleet all the way out here. The damned ‘Mandarins’ are still that willing to risk getting millions of people killed- and that unwilling to even consider admitting they might conceivably be in the wrong. The name they’ve assigned this abortion is proof enough of that! ‘Operation Raging Justice?’” The scorn in his voice was withering. “Pretty much shows how they plan on selling this to the League, doesn’t it? They’re still trying to game the system, and they don’t give a single solitary damn about the fire they’re playing with as long as it’s someone else who gets burned!”
He paused and looked around the table, his eyes like fiery blue ice.
“So what happens, what do they do, if the fleet they’ve sent after us turns around and goes home without anyone firing a shot?” he went on. “Do they suddenly decide to admit their entire so-called strategy was a recipe for disaster that they walked straight into with their eyes wide open? For that matter, do they admit they pulled back because they’ve figured out they can’t take us out? Do they even admit we let them back off instead of blowing their entire fleet into dust bunnies? No. What they’ll do is try their damnedest to pass it off as another example of their ‘restraint’ in the face of our belligerence. They didn’t turn around because they knew they’d get their ass kicked if they kept coming; they turned around because they realized our leadership was so hopelessly stupid and bloodthirsty it was really going to fight, despite the fact that we couldn’t possibly win, and they weren’t prepared to slaughter all our personnel. After all, none of our spacers are responsible for our government’s hopelessly corrupt and imperialistic policy. Isn’t that the way they’ve already been selling all this? Of course it is! So rather than press matters, once they realized Her Majesty here was perfectly prepared to throw away all of those lives, they’ve decided to exercise restraint.”
“That’s...” Grantville paused for a moment, looking at his brother, then shook his head. “I’m sorry, Ham, but that’d be too much for even the Solly public to swallow!”
“Maybe,” Vice Admiral Trenis said, her expression thoughtful. “In fact, probably. That doesn’t mean they wouldn’t try it, though, Mr. Prime Minister. As Earl White Haven says, it’s certainly compatible with the propaganda the Mandarins already have out there, anyway. And let’s face it, they’ve managed to sell their public a lot of things that were almost equally preposterous.”
“Tester knows that’s true enough,” Benjamin agreed. “I’d really prefer for Hamish to be wrong, too, Willie, but I’m very much afraid he isn’t.”
“And even if they couldn’t hope to sell it in the long run,” Mikulin said with a scowl. “They might figure they could make it stand up in the short run as long as all of them lied loudly enough with straight enough faces. Long enough for them to get a formal declaration of war through the Assembly, say.”
“All right, I’ll accept that they may be thinking that way, even if I don’t think they’d be likely to get away with it,” Grantville said, although his tone was still doubtful. “Having said that, though, what do you propose we do about it, Ham?”
“We don’t give them the choice,” White Haven said flatly.
“Hamish,” Elizabeth said. “Given my reputation, I can’t quite believe I’m the one who’s about to say this, but I’d really prefer not to kill anyone we don’t have to kill.”
“I’m not proposing we slaughter them out of hand, Your Majesty.” White Haven smiled thinly. “Mind you, the notion does have a certain appeal, especially given how cynically they’re taking advantage of the Yawata Strike. Reminds you of a carrion hawk circling a sand buck with a broken leg, doesn’t it? Or maybe more of a dune slug getting ready to strip the carcass before it’s quite dead. But what I’m saying is that we need to create a situation in which whatever happens here represents an unambiguous, undeniable, decisive defeat for the SLN. Something no Solly spinmeister’s going to be able to convince even some credulous three-year-old was a ‘voluntary act of restraint’ on the League’s part. We don’t have to blow them all out of space to do that, either.”
“You’re thinking of forcing them to surrender, aren’t you, Milord?” Thomas Theisman said slowly, his eyes narrowed.
“That’s exactly what I’m thinking,” White Haven agreed. “After what happened at Spindle, they’d find the surrender of another four hundred or so ships-of-the-wall damned hard to explain. Well, to explain as anything except an admission of total military impotence, anyway.”
“There’s something to that, Your Majesty, Madam President,” Langtry said. “On the heels of Lacoön and Spindle, the fact that we’ve simply captured the biggest single fleet the Solarian League’s ever assembled- hopefully without firing a shot or harming a single hair on anyone’s head- would have to just about finish off any remaining public confidence in Battle Fleet. Not to mention taking another four hundred-plus ships-of-the-wall out of Rajampet’s order of battle. I don’t care how many obsolete wallers he’s got in the Reserve; even he’s got to eventually figure out he’s running out of ships. Or out of trained crews to put aboard them, anyway!”
“And if Filareta doesn’t have any ‘secret orders,’ or if he’s just plain too stupid to surrender without getting a lot of his ships blown out of space first?” From Theisman’s tone, he was not disputing Langtry’s or White Haven’s analyses. He was simply a military man who wanted to be sure the civilians around that table fully understood what was being discussed.
“If we arrange things properly, Tom,” Honor said, entering the discussion for the first time. “We can create a tactical situation in which he’ll have to recognize the hopelessness of his position. In fact, you and I have already done that, haven’t we?” It was her turn to smile coldly. “The only change we’d have to make would be to wait a bit longer, let him actually cross the limit before we pull the trigger. If he’s not willing to surrender under those conditions, then he’s another Crandall, and he wouldn’t be willing to surrender under any conditions. And if that’s the case, he’d probably try to bull straight in until we stopped him the hard way, no matter what. Which means...”
“Which means we’d have to open fire on him, anyway,” Pritchart finished Honor’s thought for her.
“Exactly, Madam President.” Honor sighed. “Like Her Majesty, I don’t want to kill anyone we don’t have to kill. But if Filareta's determined to fight anyway, then I want the deck as heavily stacked in our favour as possible. And I want him hammered so hard even Sollies have to get the message that going after us is a really, really bad idea. That this isn’t just another of their business-as-usual manipulations or some kind of sporting event, with rules they can game any way they like or walk away from any time they choose. That it’s a war- their war- and that wars have consequences. We didn’t start it; they did, when Byng massacred Chatterjee’s destroyers. And we didn’t send a fleet to attack the Sol System; they’ve sent one to attack us. For that matter, the fact that so many of their people got killed at Spindle was Crandall’s fault, not ours, and she obviously meant to kill any of our people who got in her way.”
Honor’s eyes were hard, and even as she spoke, she wondered how much of the grim, cold determination she felt inside was aimed at the Solarian League and how much of it was aimed at any convenient target. Was her anger, her vengefulness, the product of New Tuscany and Spindle? Or were they the product of the Yawata Strike, directed at the Solarian League because she could not get at the ones who had actually murdered so many people she had loved?
And did it matter which it was?
“They’re bringing this war to us, when they don’t have to,” she went on coldly. “Bringing it to us when we’ve warned them they’re being played by Mesa. When we’ve specifically warned them they’re sending their superdreadnoughts into an effective deathtrap! There’s a limit to what we owe them, how far over backward we’re required to bend to keep from killing people who’re here for the express purpose of invading and conquering our star system and our homes. I support Hamish on this one. Don’t let them off. Don’t let them ‘magnanimously’ step back. Smack them down in a way that forces them to admit the stupidity of sending Filareta out here in the first place, and then see how well Kolokoltsov and his Mandarins deal with the fallout!”
From A Rising Thunder Chapter Nineteen, pages 240 to 244 Hardback edition


Their original intention WAS to force Filarata to turn around without firing a shot if possible but, giving the changing situation: (plus the realisation of who was really behind it all) caused Honor & Hamish to argue for the attempt to capture the Fleet. The textev is as follows:

Under their initial defensive planning, they would have concentrated on stopping Filareta short of the limit (and convincing him to withdraw), long before he ever got that close to the planet. She still intended to stop him before he got that close to her home world, but as for the rest of it…
From A Rising Thunder Chapter Twenty, page 251 Hardback edition


The point is, you can go the extra distance to be reasonable but that only works if your opponent is willing to be reasonable... and the Mandarins have proven themselves to be very definitely unreasonable. Personally they may not be stupid & Kolokotsov at least has been willing to acknowledge (in private to the other Mandarins) that they all, including himself have made mistakes which led to this situation but they are still unwilling to back down & when one of the other Mandarins began to imply that there just might be something to Manticore's allegations the others jumped on him.

There is a limit to far you have to go & frankly, the Solarian League passed it a long time ago.
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Re: The ART of being reasonable
Post by Castenea   » Tue Aug 23, 2016 7:47 pm

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Rincewind wrote:The point is, you can go the extra distance to be reasonable but that only works if your opponent is willing to be reasonable... and the Mandarins have proven themselves to be very definitely unreasonable. Personally they may not be stupid & Kolokotsov at least has been willing to acknowledge (in private to the other Mandarins) that they all, including himself have made mistakes which led to this situation but they are still unwilling to back down & when one of the other Mandarins began to imply that there just might be something to Manticore's allegations the others jumped on him.

There is a limit to far you have to go & frankly, the Solarian League passed it a long time ago.

Two points.

One: The Mandarins have gotten used to only giving lip service at most to the diplomatic fiction that all countries are equal. Manticore and the rest of the Haven sector powers (e.g. Anderman, Haven, Erwhon) are used to treating each other as equals. Now that most of the military force of the Haven sector is allied, they may actually have enough strength to hold the SL off indefinitely.

Two: Once Manticore recovers from the Yawata strike, they will resume the trajectory that had an economist suggesting that they would have a larger GDP than the SL in a decade or two. Note this did not require acquiring any new parts of the empire.

In a long fight with the SL, all of the minor independent polities (e.g. Talbot, those systems not part of the restored Republic between Haven and the Manticore alliance) are actually an asset to the GA as long as they are self sufficient and not pirate nests or hunting grounds. They will provide support to the GA in much the same way as the Nations of South America aided France in the first World War.

The Mandarins are in a vise of their own making as once the aura of invincibility is lost the SLN will be facing having to fight far more often to convince planets in the verge that resistance is futile. The SLN will win most of these fights, as these planets will likely be using tech somewhere between pre-alliance Grayson and current SLN. However these fights will be a steady drain on SL resources. The Mandarins have convinced themselves that sending Manticore a "Mea Culpa" note will end their aura of invincibility (or inevitability).
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Re: The ART of being reasonable
Post by Rincewind   » Tue Aug 23, 2016 8:02 pm

Rincewind
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Posts: 277
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Castenea wrote:
Rincewind wrote:The point is, you can go the extra distance to be reasonable but that only works if your opponent is willing to be reasonable... and the Mandarins have proven themselves to be very definitely unreasonable. Personally they may not be stupid & Kolokotsov at least has been willing to acknowledge (in private to the other Mandarins) that they all, including himself have made mistakes which led to this situation but they are still unwilling to back down & when one of the other Mandarins began to imply that there just might be something to Manticore's allegations the others jumped on him.

There is a limit to far you have to go & frankly, the Solarian League passed it a long time ago.

Two points.

One: The Mandarins have gotten used to only giving lip service at most to the diplomatic fiction that all countries are equal. Manticore and the rest of the Haven sector powers (e.g. Anderman, Haven, Erwhon) are used to treating each other as equals. Now that most of the military force of the Haven sector is allied, they may actually have enough strength to hold the SL off indefinitely.

Two: Once Manticore recovers from the Yawata strike, they will resume the trajectory that had an economist suggesting that they would have a larger GDP than the SL in a decade or two. Note this did not require acquiring any new parts of the empire.

In a long fight with the SL, all of the minor independent polities (e.g. Talbot, those systems not part of the restored Republic between Haven and the Manticore alliance) are actually an asset to the GA as long as they are self sufficient and not pirate nests or hunting grounds. They will provide support to the GA in much the same way as the Nations of South America aided France in the first World War.

The Mandarins are in a vise of their own making as once the aura of invincibility is lost the SLN will be facing having to fight far more often to convince planets in the verge that resistance is futile. The SLN will win most of these fights, as these planets will likely be using tech somewhere between pre-alliance Grayson and current SLN. However these fights will be a steady drain on SL resources. The Mandarins have convinced themselves that sending Manticore a "Mea Culpa" note will end their aura of invincibility (or inevitability).


I agree with you on both of those points. However, as I am a bear with a very small brain there is one thing I am confused about. My original post was in answer to a post by Cthia suggesting that they just let Filareta's Fleet return unharmed & my opinion on what the text said about Honor & Hamish's reasons for not letting them go. So, do you agree with Cthia's or with my point of view?
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Re: The ART of being reasonable
Post by cthia   » Tue Aug 23, 2016 9:50 pm

cthia
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Rincewind, I agree with your point of view. Those are excellent supporting textevs you have on exhibit. Rereading all of that makes perfect sense.

I was fairly certain I had read somewhere that they were contemplating stopping Filareta short but couldn't find it. I suppose I was just overlooking it somehow.

I think your posts also covered the paraphrased quote of Harrington's I included. (I thought I had a much closer paraphrase.)

Pleased to read that Honor didn't quite agree with her spouse's logic but supported it. Not sure of the particulars of her reluctance and wonder exactly what her differences were.

At any rate, I still think that backing such a huge force into a corner when the enemy is a snake didn't fall under the heading of smart. Though short of letting them hyper out, which I now agree (even if reluctantly) wasn't an option and have no idea what other option existed. Nice post.

Aside: Discussing it with Emily? Thought that sort of thing didn't happen. Though, in this case, what is Manticore to do. I would think that the planet would be warned, no? Yet, if they are warned and news of it is all over HD then wouldn't the possibility of it getting back to the League - that their travel plans are out of the bag - be high?

Loose lips sink ships. Ask the League.

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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