cthia wrote:WeirdlyWired wrote:Given hindsight and 20/20 vision and all? NOT fair. what you know at the time/what you should have known but were too arrogant to see is all you can base judgements on. Knowing the day before Grendlesbane, what was going to happen, yes he could have made better choices, but as none would be "good" choices, would it really matter in the end? Knowing Tourville's battle plan the day before First Manticore, yeah, he could have put up a more brilliant defense. Unfortunately RFC only grants HH prescience of the enemy's plans; and even then, only semi-omniscience.Somtaaw wrote:Higgins wasn't there for First Manticore, he was still in the doghouse over Grendlesbane I think.
Higgins was in command of Home Fleet when Oyster Bay blew the crap out of everything... it was basically Grendlesbane all over again for him, except with massive collateral civilian casualties. Think how Honor felt, just from the military & civilian casualties, and knowing she'd been in Haven negotiating a peace treaty (absolutely nothing SHE could have done). And Higgins was in command, it was his job to stop things like that, regardless of the stealth feature and nobody seeing it.
If Higgins isn't having even half the doubts Honor had at the beginning of Flag in Exile, before High Admiral Matthews talks her into being a GSN Admiral, I'll eat my laptop. His confidence has to be in the toilet, and if he has a third catastrophy while he's in command, despite doing everything right, I can't see Higgins not suiciding.
He was never in the doghouse over Grendelsbane. Grendelsbane was the hard call but the right call. Higgins is forged out of the right metal, tempered with the right stuff.
Uhh, what? Higgins got beached almost before he even got back to Manticore, Janacek did that immediately. He was "rehabilitated" by the White Haven admiralty, but that doesn't mean he was immediately handed a command and shipped out. That's the most likely reason Higgins just happened to be available to take over Home Fleet after they could reconstitute it, and send Honor off to Haven.
And whether it was actually his "fault" or not, yes he would be blaming himself, it was his job to stop attacks. Grendlesbane he could have fought a little smarter, but Oyster Bay was a complete blindside. If Givens can blame herself and try repeatedly to resign, then Higgins most definitely blames himself and also tried to resign, and undoubtedly given the same reasons why Givens wasn't allowed to resign.
However feelings, and self-confidence issues are totally different than logical thought and being told (honestly) it wasn't your fault. And after going through two back to back ultra failures like he has, a third will break him just like Honor very nearly convinced herself after Pauls murder that she couldn't command again.
Terekhov's situation was completely different, there's no comparison, he failed in the previous war, smashed the same class that defeated him, THEN went on to the moment he needed approval. Look at his self-confidence issues, he'd outright admitted he'd had them to his Exec after hammering the Mars cruiser that he did it because of his demons. And look at how he had still been waking in nightmares of his immediate prior experience in command of a Queens ship... if he'd lost in Nuncio, he'd have been just as broken. He wouldn't have suicided over it, but he'd never again command a ship.