MuonNeutrino wrote:This is a perfectly reasonable chain of events that the Manties might indeed have been expected to anticipate. Note, however, that this series of events has the the response fleet not even leaving havenite space until 2.5 months after the Battle of Lovat. Meanwhile, in the actual timeline, the Battle of Manticore took place on July 24, 1921 - *less* than two and a half months after Lovat, which happened May 15.
In other words, the plausibly anticipatable scenario you sketched out, once you account for travel time, doesn't have the Havenites possibly being able to attack the Manticore system until at least a month or two after the battle actually took place! This is the entire point of Weber's explanation about Theisman's pre-planning and pre-deployment throwing off the Alliance's planning. For clarity, let me repeat the pertinent part of that pearl (italics original):
What does it matter weather they attacked Manticore in July or in September? Do you think it would have changed the total surprise faced by Manticore? What if they had waited another month or two and someone decided to accelerate the next raid? If they caught 8th Fleet away from Trevor's Star this would have been a total disaster. And just why were they surprised? They had an enemy with a numerical advantage that was fleeting, an enemy who would be greatly motivated to move as fast as he can. There is absolutely no excuse for what happened... isent Manticore the one that consistently trains by using the most pessimistic criteria? Why did they choose to assume that they couldn't possibly attack that quickly?
They knew about the covering forces which means they knew that those forces could be redeployed without them even knowing. Depending on how many of them there were, and how far from Haven they were, they could have concentrated long before the Alliance clued in. They should have expected an attack immediately after Lovat simply because it would be their tradition to assign the enemy capabilities far better then they are likely to face, what they assumed was that there was no way that Theisman had the operation planned out, and would move fast enough to get there in less then x months.
Weber, in the pearls wrote:Thomas Theisman responded to the discovery that Apollo existed far more rapidly than anyone in the Alliance anticipated that he could.
Why? Was he an idiot or something?
That's in no small part because he'd already done all of the basic planning for Operation Beatrice before he found out Apollo existed... Theisman didn't have to stop, analyze what had happened, pull together a response plan, redeploy his assets, and go.
That is why when at war you plan, so that if an opportunity or the need pops up you can take advantage. Why are they surprised that Theisman planned Beatrice ahead of time when the RMN had planned out Lacoon 1 and 2 decades if not centuries ahead of time?
He'd already put together what he used as a response plan and redeployed his assets to carry it out, which cut at the very minimum weeks, and quite probably months, from the time which would otherwise have been required to get something like Beatrice off the ground and into Manticoran space. By which time Eighth Fleet would have been even more heavily reinforced with additional Apollo-capable SD(P)s and the system defense variant of Apollo, despite the bottlenecks, would have been deployed in strength.
And 8th Fleet might have been attacking a Havenite system and away from the Home System then so them being reinforced is pretty much irrelevant... As for Apollo? Anything they get would have to be split between Manticore, Grayson, Andermani and Trevor's Star not enough to tip the balance.
...The fact that Honor was off the terminus drilling her new ships threw a spanner into the timing of the response for Trevor's Star... [but] one of the reasons she felt secure in carrying out routine training operations was that, as I mentioned above, any massive offensive against the Manticoran home system specifically in response to Sanskrit couldn't be mounted that soon...
My question would be how soon did they think it could be done? Did they have a count down timer? Why would the RMN be planning an attack using 8th Fleet if it was also the strategic reserve for the Home System?
In other words, the alliance was *not* blind to the possibility that Haven might launch an attack on the Manticore system in response to the Battle of Lovat. They simply did not believe that any attack could be launched *that soon*, because they did not expect Theisman to not only have already planned an all-out attack (and not just a generic contingency plan, which would definitely be expected but which also would have to have been updated and drilled for before being used, but a plan specifically prompted by and devised for to the current war situation), but also to have *pre-concentrated and pre-positioned his forces* for the attack. It was *that* which cut literally months off of any response time the alliance could have reasonably anticipated.
He had several fleets capable of being diverted within short notice, he could have stripped Haven bare of SD(P)'s as well... when someone is in a desperate position, you don't assign what he can and cannot do...
The Alliance didn't believe that the People's Navy would launch something like Operation Icarus and look how well that worked out for them... making the same stupid assumption on a grander scale is inexcusable.
One last thing, didn't Tourville start drilling his fleet AFTER Lovat? I mean they did do some of the prep work before hand but Tourville didn't get his order if I remember correctly until after Lovat happened, so he got a plan from Theisman and a promise that he will get a fleet from pre-deployed assets yet he had no idea before Lovat.