kzt wrote:It's a fight to the DEATH: In this corner are the 1500 worlds of SL, with a total population of 5 trillion. In this corner we have the three non-idustrialized worlds of Manticore, with a total population of 3 billion. In that corner is Beowulf and Haven, who are now attempting to exit the arena claiming the treatment of the SL PoWs is a treaty violation and their alliance is now void.
Consider the treatment of the "POWs" in Split, they're being rather well treated, and yet they still harp and complain at every opportunity they're "being mistreated":
Shadow of Freedom, Ch 7 wrote:“So that’s about the size of it, on the housing side, at least.” Henri Krietzmann looked around the Governor’s House conference room in the planetary and quadrant capital of Thimble and shrugged. “It’s only been seven weeks since O’Cleary’s surrender, so despite Admiral Bordelon’s protests, we’re actually doing pretty damned well, I think. Especially considering the fact that we’re not the ones who went and invaded their star system!”
-snip-
And she obviously intended to be as inflexible as possible in demanding Manticore meet the Deneb Accords’ obligations to properly “house, feed, and care for” prisoners of war. The fact that there were the next best thing to half a million of those prisoners, and that they’d arrived with absolutely no warning, couldn’t mitigate those obligations in any way, as far as Bordelon was concerned. She not only repeated her demands for “adequate housing” at every meeting with any of Medusa’s or Krietzmann’s representatives but insisted her protests against her personnel’s “mistreatment” be made part of the official record.
And yet, even Vice-Commissioner Jongbo in Madras understood,
Shadow of Freedom, Ch 35 wrote:Unfortunately, he didn’t have much to work with. He recognized the weakness of his position as well as he was certain Gold Peak did, yet the only defense he had was to make it a matter of playing public roles against one another. He couldn’t keep her from going wherever she wanted, but as long as he played his role and blustered strongly enough, he might at least slow her down. And he could always hope she’d be worried enough about setting precedents to hesitate about resorting to more rigorous techniques. After all, eventually somebody on the Manties’ side was going to find himself in an analogous position. Hopefully Gold Peak would hesitate to give someone on the Solarian side an excuse for starting right out pulling fingernails and toenails.
Unfortunately, only a complete imbecile would think for one moment that the Solarian League was going to worry about precedents set by Manticore, and Gold Peak was no imbecile. Hongbo was glumly aware that Solarian arrogance—and especially that of Frontier Security and the Gendarmerie—was going to be sublimely confident it could do whatever it wanted without worrying about reprisals, and he never doubted the Manticoran admiral across the desk from him knew that as well as he did.
Between those two little quotes, let's also examine one critical term... "prisoner of war". As we know, Tsang and by extension the Mandarins, don't even
have a declaration of war. So both Crandall's attacks, and Filareta's Raging Justice were, essentially pirate attacks writ large, and that's in the books too. The POW label is a courtesy that Manticore has chosen to extend, but is under zero obligation and everyone inside and out of the League understands that. But Manticore doesn't have to follow every rule of the Deneb Accords (which are presumably very similar to the Geneva Convention's Rules of War)
Manticore dropping POW's on Sphinx or Gryphon is slightly eyebrow raising, but it's certainly not the brutality we saw out of StateSec, and can expect from OFS/Gendarmes. If the Sollies are going to complain on Split where they were essentially put on tropical paradise; with hurricane season months away, they're going to absolutely HOWL bloody murder no matter where you put them.
Since they'll complain no matter where you imprison them, may as well just drop them on Gryphon. Higher than Terra gravity, energetic weather, and no local hexapuma's to keep from munching the prisoners. Sphinx just has too many threats, from peak bears & hexapuma's, and we also know they have snakes with legs but do not know whether those are poisonous snakes. Too many animal threats on Sphinx, and while it might be possible to convince some treecats to "watch over" prisoners, it's inefficient compared to a similar prisoner camp on Gryphon would be, despite the weather.