Topic Actions

Topic Search

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 60 guests

How come Nesbit hasn't been rumbled?

Join us in talking discussing all things Honor, including (but not limited to) tactics, favorite characters, and book discussions.
How come Nesbit hasn't been rumbled?
Post by martin   » Sat Sep 03, 2016 10:37 am

martin
Lieutenant (Senior Grade)

Posts: 66
Joined: Sat Mar 31, 2012 5:06 pm

Nesbit :twisted:
There he is, a Mesan Alignment plant, brother of another MA plant and operative, sat with all the leaders of the Grand Alliance and Dozens of treecats.

Surely the treecats must be able to detect something dodgy about him - even if HH doesn't.

Sorry if this has been asked before. I couldn't find it.
Top
Re: How come Nesbit hasn't been rumbled?
Post by fallsfromtrees   » Sat Sep 03, 2016 11:22 am

fallsfromtrees
Vice Admiral

Posts: 1960
Joined: Tue Nov 04, 2014 10:51 am
Location: Mesa, Arizona

martin wrote:Nesbit :twisted:
There he is, a Mesan Alignment plant, brother of another MA plant and operative, sat with all the leaders of the Grand Alliance and Dozens of treecats.

Surely the treecats must be able to detect something dodgy about him - even if HH doesn't.

Sorry if this has been asked before. I couldn't find it.

Wrong Nesbit. The MA agent is a cousin (IIRC) of the Nesbit who was sitting at the conferences, etc.
========================

The only problem with quotes on the internet is that you can't authenticate them -- Abraham Lincoln
Top
Re: How come Nesbit hasn't been rumbled?
Post by Somtaaw   » Sat Sep 03, 2016 11:53 am

Somtaaw
Rear Admiral

Posts: 1203
Joined: Mon Sep 01, 2014 11:36 am
Location: Canada

Do we have actual confirmation the security agent Nesbit actually *is* a MAlign operative and not merely one of their informers?

From how it seemed, he merely passed along the information to the MAlign about how Grosclaude and Arnold were manipulating the Manties and how Arnold would be needing an untracable assassination thing soon.

But I don't recall there being anything that Nesbit was actualy a manipulator himself, which lends strength to him being merely 'associated' with them, but not necessarily a plant/operative for them. A simple spy in other words.
Top
Re: How come Nesbit hasn't been rumbled?
Post by fallsfromtrees   » Sat Sep 03, 2016 1:11 pm

fallsfromtrees
Vice Admiral

Posts: 1960
Joined: Tue Nov 04, 2014 10:51 am
Location: Mesa, Arizona

Somtaaw wrote:Do we have actual confirmation the security agent Nesbit actually *is* a MAlign operative and not merely one of their informers?

From how it seemed, he merely passed along the information to the MAlign about how Grosclaude and Arnold were manipulating the Manties and how Arnold would be needing an untracable assassination thing soon.

But I don't recall there being anything that Nesbit was actualy a manipulator himself, which lends strength to him being merely 'associated' with them, but not necessarily a plant/operative for them. A simple spy in other words.

He did have access to the nanotech assassination tool, which would be unlkely for just an informer - since unless he was a agent he shouldn't have even known about it.
========================

The only problem with quotes on the internet is that you can't authenticate them -- Abraham Lincoln
Top
Re: How come Nesbit hasn't been rumbled?
Post by Somtaaw   » Sat Sep 03, 2016 1:19 pm

Somtaaw
Rear Admiral

Posts: 1203
Joined: Mon Sep 01, 2014 11:36 am
Location: Canada

fallsfromtrees wrote:
Somtaaw wrote:Do we have actual confirmation the security agent Nesbit actually *is* a MAlign operative and not merely one of their informers?

From how it seemed, he merely passed along the information to the MAlign about how Grosclaude and Arnold were manipulating the Manties and how Arnold would be needing an untracable assassination thing soon.

But I don't recall there being anything that Nesbit was actualy a manipulator himself, which lends strength to him being merely 'associated' with them, but not necessarily a plant/operative for them. A simple spy in other words.

He did have access to the nanotech assassination tool, which would be unlkely for just an informer - since unless he was a agent he shouldn't have even known about it.


We don't actually know he did it, and it was Miss Anisimovna herself who suggested to Detweiler that Nesbit might be looking for the untracable assassination technique.

And recall, later on, when it gets back to Detweiler and company that the Havenite government is fingering the MAlign for "using" Giancola to maneuver Haven and Manticore into war with each other and assassinating Grosclaude the way he did proves it was them. And Detweiler was taken aback and said something that amounts to "we didn't have a thing to do with that, until it was already over".

I can't find the exact quotes in the books, but they're there if anyone else happens to recall those scenes.
Top
Re: How come Nesbit hasn't been rumbled?
Post by munroburton   » Sat Sep 03, 2016 2:02 pm

munroburton
Admiral

Posts: 2375
Joined: Sat Jun 15, 2013 10:16 am
Location: Scotland

Somtaaw wrote:
fallsfromtrees wrote:He did have access to the nanotech assassination tool, which would be unlkely for just an informer - since unless he was a agent he shouldn't have even known about it.


We don't actually know he did it, and it was Miss Anisimovna herself who suggested to Detweiler that Nesbit might be looking for the untracable assassination technique.

And recall, later on, when it gets back to Detweiler and company that the Havenite government is fingering the MAlign for "using" Giancola to maneuver Haven and Manticore into war with each other and assassinating Grosclaude the way he did proves it was them. And Detweiler was taken aback and said something that amounts to "we didn't have a thing to do with that, until it was already over".

I can't find the exact quotes in the books, but they're there if anyone else happens to recall those scenes.


Detweiler was referring to being blamed for Giancola's death - which really was an accident. A drunken marine flew an air car into him. Given everything else - including the MAlign's interference in the negotiation process and Grosclaude's assassination - Zilwicki and Cachat revealed, it seemed obvious in hindsight that Giancola had been assassinated.

I really did think the Nesbitts were a MAlign sleeper line for a while. I suppose it's still possible but the likelihood has dropped(and it was never high to start with, given how the Legislaturalist system meant any sleepers not part of it wound up locked under a glass ceiling - therefore any sleepers would have been purged or fled) since the treecats started hanging around Haven's senior two-legs.

Colonel Nesbitt's misdeeds can be ascribed to money. Although, since he still works as chief of security for the Secretary of State, he has to be sweating bullets over his past involvement, given what Havenite Intelligence now knows about the MAlign. In other words, he knows where the nanotech came from.
Top
Re: How come Nesbit hasn't been rumbled?
Post by Somtaaw   » Sat Sep 03, 2016 2:54 pm

Somtaaw
Rear Admiral

Posts: 1203
Joined: Mon Sep 01, 2014 11:36 am
Location: Canada

munroburton wrote:
Somtaaw wrote:
We don't actually know he did it, and it was Miss Anisimovna herself who suggested to Detweiler that Nesbit might be looking for the untracable assassination technique.

And recall, later on, when it gets back to Detweiler and company that the Havenite government is fingering the MAlign for "using" Giancola to maneuver Haven and Manticore into war with each other and assassinating Grosclaude the way he did proves it was them. And Detweiler was taken aback and said something that amounts to "we didn't have a thing to do with that, until it was already over".

I can't find the exact quotes in the books, but they're there if anyone else happens to recall those scenes.


Detweiler was referring to being blamed for Giancola's death - which really was an accident. A drunken marine flew an air car into him. Given everything else - including the MAlign's interference in the negotiation process and Grosclaude's assassination - Zilwicki and Cachat revealed, it seemed obvious in hindsight that Giancola had been assassinated.

I really did think the Nesbitts were a MAlign sleeper line for a while. I suppose it's still possible but the likelihood has dropped(and it was never high to start with, given how the Legislaturalist system meant any sleepers not part of it wound up locked under a glass ceiling - therefore any sleepers would have been purged or fled) since the treecats started hanging around Haven's senior two-legs.

Colonel Nesbitt's misdeeds can be ascribed to money. Although, since he still works as chief of security for the Secretary of State, he has to be sweating bullets over his past involvement, given what Havenite Intelligence now knows about the MAlign. In other words, he knows where the nanotech came from.


I was referring more to how Haven currently thinks Giancola was the MAlign operative, because all the evidence that they know about holds together and that's who they're currently blaming.

Meanwhile Detweiler and company, know they didn't manipulate Giancola into doing that, he did it himself. The MAlign plans to manipulate the war into happening was on the Manticoran side (presumably Descroix). But they did make the nanotech assassination technique available to Giancola, via Nesbitt to help 'cover his tracks' or some such. Which could put Nesbitt as a Senior Intelligence Agent, not necessarily inside even the outermost onion layer, but senior enough there was a two-way command and communication loop instead of the more usual one-way from the spy.
Top
Re: How come Nesbit hasn't been rumbled?
Post by Somtaaw   » Sat Sep 03, 2016 3:56 pm

Somtaaw
Rear Admiral

Posts: 1203
Joined: Mon Sep 01, 2014 11:36 am
Location: Canada

Found a partial bit for what I was saying, how Giancola was considered to be the MAlign operative or agent in Haven territory.

Mission of Honor, Ch 34 wrote:"You made the point that we don't know what whoever hit Manticore's ultimate objectives may be, but we have to suspect Manpower's involved, for all the reasons you enumerated. And then we have Cachat's suspicion that Manpower was involved in the attempt on Queen Berry from which it's only a short step to their being involved with Admiral Webster's assassination in Old Chicago. For which"—her eyes bored suddenly into Theisman's—"some form of suicidal compulsion appears to have been used. Very much, now that I think about it. like what happened to a certain Yves Grosclaude."
It was suddenly very, very quiet.
"Are you suggesting Manpower was working with Giancola?" LePic asked very carefully.
"No, I'm suggesting Arnold was working with Manpower ," Pritchart replied grimly. "If they're willing—and able—to manipulate the Solarian League into going to war with the Manties, why in the world wouldn't they figure they could do the same with us? I mean, look how much easier it would be, given the fact that we didn't even have a formal peace treaty from our last war!"

-snip-

"I know. And the only thing more dangerous than not seeing conspiracies that are there is seeing ones that aren't ," Pritchart acknowledged. "But talking about conspiracies and suicidal assassins, there's that attempt on Alexander-Harrington, too. We know we didn't do it, although I've never blamed the Manties for figuring we were the ones with the best motive. But if Manpower's been moving chess pieces around like this, and if they have the technology—or whatever—they used to control the assassin who killed Webster and that poor patsy who carried out the Torch attack, why shouldn't they have tried to pick off one of the Manties' best military commanders? Especially if the object of the exercise was for us to trash Manticore for them?"


Mission of Honor, Ch 40 wrote:"Which brings us back to Nouveau Paris," Pritchart said grimly.
The others looked at her, and she barked a metallic, snarling laugh.
"Of course it does! For that matter, Tom, you and I have already discussed this, in a way. If McBryde was telling the truth about the existence of this 'assassination nanotech' of theirs, I think we finally know what happened to Yves Grosclaude, don't we?" She showed her teeth, and this time the glare at the backs of her eyes burned like a topaz balefire. "Frankly, it ties in rather neatly with the only bits and pieces of forensic evidence Kevin and Inspector Abrioux managed to come up with at the time. And just why, do you think, was this 'Mesan Alignment' kind enough to provide Arnold with one of its most closely held, top secret toys? Remember what you were just saying about sleepers, Tom? And that little comment of yours, Denis, about producing movement economically?
-snipped one paragraph0
"It makes sense, doesn't it?" she pressed. "They played us— me— by having Arnold doctor the diplomatic correspondence. Hell, they may've had someone at the other end doing the same thing for High Ridge! No one's seen hide nor hair of Descroix ever since the wheels came off, now have they? And then, when we figured out what Arnold had done, they played Elizabeth by convincing her we'd killed Webster and tried to kill her niece exactly the same way the Legislaturalists killed her father and Saint-Just tried to kill her! God only knows how many millions of civilians and spacers—ours and the Manties'—these . . . people


As far as Haven thought or believed, prior to Cachat re-appearing with Simoes, they already believed that Giancola was working for Manpower. Once Cachat, Zilwikki and Simoes reappeared, Haven simply changed it from Manpower to Mesan Alignment, and then brought the whole thing to Manticore.

During the later meeting, when Detweiler finds out about Simoes reappearing, and Haven's beliefs, is when he mentions that regret of providing Nesbit with the tool for Giancola to assassinate Grosclaude. I just haven't found the specific passages just yet. I'll edit in when I find it.

Edit: Found it

A Rising Thunder, Ch 14 wrote:“Oh, it gets better, Father,” Benjamin said harshly. “I don’t know how much information McBryde actually handed Zilwicki and Cachat, or how much substantiation they’ve got for it, but they got one hell of a lot more than we’d want them to have! They’re talking about virus-based nanotech assassinations, the streak drive, and the spider drive, and they’re naming names about something called ‘the Mesan Alignment.’ In fact, they’re busy telling the Manty Parliament—and, I’m sure, the Havenite Congress and all the rest of the fucking galaxy!—all about the Mesan plan to conquer the known universe. In fact, you’ll be astonished to know that Secretary of State Arnold Giancola was in the nefarious Alignment’s pay when he deliberately maneuvered Haven back into shooting at the Manties!”
“What?” Albrecht blinked in surprise. “We didn’t have anything to do with that!”
“Of course not. But fair’s fair; we did know he was fiddling the correspondence. Only after the fact, maybe, when he enlisted Nesbitt to help cover his tracks, but we did know. And apparently giving Nesbitt the nanotech to get rid of Grosclaude was a tactical error. It sounds like Usher got at least a sniff of it, and even if he hadn’t, the similarities between Grosclaude’s suicide and the Webster assassination—and the attempt on Harrington—are pretty obvious once someone starts looking. So the theory is that if we’re the only ones with the nanotech, and if Giancola used nanotech to get rid of Grosclaude, he must’ve been working for us all along. At least they don’t seem to have put Nesbitt into the middle of it all—yet, anyway—but their reconstruction actually makes sense, given what they think they know at this point.”


So the MAlign knew what Giancola was doing, and they didn't have a thing to do with him manipulating the war. But Nesbitt is something that isn't quite a spy, but isn't inside the onion either. So exactly what Nesbitt is, in relation to Mesa is... ambiguous.
Top
Re: How come Nesbit hasn't been rumbled?
Post by Louis R   » Sat Sep 03, 2016 5:02 pm

Louis R
Rear Admiral

Posts: 1298
Joined: Thu Jan 01, 2015 9:25 pm

I'm inclined to think that Nesbitt was inside the onion, simply because that nanotech was released for his op. That needn't mean that he was any _further_ inside than, say, Ottweiler is, or even only as far as Harahap [aware that _something_ is going on, not aware what, quite willing to keep all speculation on the subject tightly under wraps]. On balance, though, I don't think he could really have been effective if he wasn't somewhere a little deeper - he had to know what the immediate object of the exercise was, and what the parameters were, in order to assist things in the right direction. And, more importantly, in order to know when a report was critical enough to use an extremely sensitive channel to get it back to Mesa in time. It's also telling that he was high enough up the chain for the Detweilers to know him by name. Sure, they'd have been briefed when the nanotech was released, but I really can't see it _being_ released to somebody Ben had never heard of before that point.

All of which makes it possible that the Nesbitts are indeed a Star Line. The last surviving such line in the Republic, perhaps, surviving by luck, nimblefootedness or a simple accurate reading of the developing situation. Nonetheless, since we know that not every member of a line is recruited into the onion, or even, off Mesa, told what they are, there's no reason to assume that both of them are MA agents.

BTW, 'sleeper' is a very poor term for the Star Lines planted in other societies. Sleeper normally seems to imply an agent who is in place, but completely inactive, where the MA agents have been quite active in maintaining lines of communication.

Somtaaw wrote:
munroburton wrote:
Detweiler was referring to being blamed for Giancola's death - which really was an accident. A drunken marine flew an air car into him. Given everything else - including the MAlign's interference in the negotiation process and Grosclaude's assassination - Zilwicki and Cachat revealed, it seemed obvious in hindsight that Giancola had been assassinated.

I really did think the Nesbitts were a MAlign sleeper line for a while. I suppose it's still possible but the likelihood has dropped(and it was never high to start with, given how the Legislaturalist system meant any sleepers not part of it wound up locked under a glass ceiling - therefore any sleepers would have been purged or fled) since the treecats started hanging around Haven's senior two-legs.

Colonel Nesbitt's misdeeds can be ascribed to money. Although, since he still works as chief of security for the Secretary of State, he has to be sweating bullets over his past involvement, given what Havenite Intelligence now knows about the MAlign. In other words, he knows where the nanotech came from.


I was referring more to how Haven currently thinks Giancola was the MAlign operative, because all the evidence that they know about holds together and that's who they're currently blaming.

Meanwhile Detweiler and company, know they didn't manipulate Giancola into doing that, he did it himself. The MAlign plans to manipulate the war into happening was on the Manticoran side (presumably Descroix). But they did make the nanotech assassination technique available to Giancola, via Nesbitt to help 'cover his tracks' or some such. Which could put Nesbitt as a Senior Intelligence Agent, not necessarily inside even the outermost onion layer, but senior enough there was a two-way command and communication loop instead of the more usual one-way from the spy.
Top
Re: How come Nesbit hasn't been rumbled?
Post by saber964   » Sat Sep 03, 2016 6:02 pm

saber964
Admiral

Posts: 2423
Joined: Thu Dec 13, 2012 8:41 pm
Location: Spokane WA USA

munroburton wrote: quote="Somtaaw"]
fallsfromtrees wrote:He did have access to the nanotech assassination tool, which would be unlkely for just an informer - since unless he was a agent he shouldn't have even known about it.


We don't actually know he did it, and it was Miss Anisimovna herself who suggested to Detweiler that Nesbit might be looking for the untracable assassination technique.

And recall, later on, when it gets back to Detweiler and company that the Havenite government is fingering the MAlign for "using" Giancola to maneuver Haven and Manticore into war with each other and assassinating Grosclaude the way he did proves it was them. And Detweiler was taken aback and said something that amounts to "we didn't have a thing to do with that, until it was already over".

I can't find the exact quotes in the books, but they're there if anyone else happens to recall those scenes.


Detweiler was referring to being blamed for Giancola's death - which really was an accident. A drunken marine flew an air car into him. Given everything else - including the MAlign's interference in the negotiation process and Grosclaude's assassination - Zilwicki and Cachat revealed, it seemed obvious in hindsight that Giancola had been assassinated.

I really did think the Nesbitts were a MAlign sleeper line for a while. I suppose it's still possible but the likelihood has dropped(and it was never high to start with, given how the Legislaturalist system meant any sleepers not part of it wound up locked under a glass ceiling - therefore any sleepers would have been purged or fled) since the treecats started hanging around Haven's senior two-legs.

Colonel Nesbitt's misdeeds can be ascribed to money. Although, since he still works as chief of security for the Secretary of State, he has to be sweating bullets over his past involvement, given what Havenite Intelligence now knows about the MAlign. In other words, he knows where the nanotech came from.[/quote]

Ding ding, a bit of a problem. Arnold Giancola was SecState and died with his younger brother Jason in an air car accident when he was hit by a DUI marine recruit. The one who was assassinated was Yevs Grosclaud special envoy to the SKM.
Top

Return to Honorverse