kzt wrote:What made Grayson highly dangerous was their allies. Committing the scale of forces needed against them offers the possibility that your allies will attack them while you are occupied in your operation against Grayson. The actual bestdown of Grayson might take 48 hours, but it takes at least a month where a big chunk of your forces are committed to the operation, and probably more like 2+ months.
As was mentioned earlier, how much you have to protect matters, but also who your allies and enemies. If you have a known enemy that you have to continually guard against then your freedom of action is constrained. If you don't have any enemies like that, have no need to garrison againt revolts and have lots of allies around your important areas it makes your ability to project power much greater than someone in the reverse situation with the same size military.
But is that important in ranking their force alone?
For example, modern Spain - a NATO member in good steading, decent tech, but not the best out there, and a force on the smaller side. But: mess with them and you have to mess with NATO - ie the US (unless it's a squabble about Gibralter - I believe the US will offer to arbitrate that one, but stand off from taking sides in any confrontation).
So because they have the US and NATO with them, are they a Tier 1 force? or is it just a consideration in their rankings? Shouldn't the rankings be concerned with their individual firepower, so in case they pull a Venezuela or an Iran and turn on their former allies, their ranking be consistent?
Being in someone's shadow should be seen as a negative - their native defense industry cannot replace/repair damaged and depleted units, and their military is not necessarily sized/built appropriately to deal with all threats, due to reliance on allies and their capabilities. Also, being the strong member of an alliance draws risks - important, strategic units could be engaged elsewhere defending weak allies, weakening your home defenses by virtue of strategic dispersal.
For example, WWII France - their northern defenses were dependant on Belgium and Holland's defenses. A draught which dried the lowlands turned fields that normally were marsh into highways for the Wehrmacht's tanks, and allowed Germany to quickly go around France's main line of defense. While Belgium was more in France's shadow than vice versa, France did depend on their military for their Northern defenses, so concentrated their defenses in other places. In which case, allies made them weaker.