ldwechsler wrote:The subject is not only complex but convoluted. Manticore, all through this series, was at a numerical disadvantage against both Haven and the Sollies.
But numbers clearly do not say all. Remember that at the start of WWII, the US Navy was not THAT far behind the Japanese navy in terms of number of capital ships. Of course, the US lost 7 battleships the first day. And the Japanese carriers, particularly their aircraft, were far in advance of what the US had at the very start of the war.
But the US could produce far more warships and by 1943 it was pushing back the Japanese even through some of the weapons were not as good (torpedoes) and others were only gaining superiority.
In the Honorverse, at the start of the war the Manties were probably a generation ahead of Haven and the HAvenite systems were a real mess in terms of education and manufacturing.
The Andermanni were always considered by Manticore essentially on the same level.
The Solarians were feared so much for their numbers that few seemed to notice that their ships were generations behind. It takes time to catch up. So they might be considered a top tier navy but not when they have to fight a tough opponent.
There are a huge number of variables. Shannon Foraker turned into a major variation all by herself. Haven ships quickly grew dangerous. But we tend to forget that all of this took place over years. DW didn't write a lot of books with Janacek in charge. But he was there for years messing things up and allowing Foraker's changes to life Haven back into the top tier.
Will the Sollies have the time to upgrade? Will they let the talent go or prefer to pay off the big shots? And will the Mesalliance allow them the time?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.
Not quite on the IJN battleships on December seventh.
The U.S. had around twenty battleships in commission and four nearing competition and four under construction versus the IJN ten battleships in commission and one fitting out and one under construction.
IIRC the breakdown goes as this
IJN
Ise class x2
Fuso class x2
Kongo class x4
Yamato class 1 fitting out 1 under construction
USN
Wyoming class 1
New York class x2
Nevada class x2
Pennsylvania class x2
New Mexico class x3
Tennessee class x2
Colorado class x3
North Carolina class x2
South Dakota class 4 nearing competition
Iowa class 4 under construction