drinksmuchcoffee wrote:It is a big mistake to assume that because a small number of people within an organization know (or suspect) something, that the organization as a whole would actually be able to act as if it knew that thing.
A specific case in point. In the summer of 1990, the overwhelming consensus of US intelligence analysts was that Saddam Hussein would not invade Kuwait. There was a small group at the CIA and DoD that was convinced otherwise, but they were unable to get a fair hearing until hours before the tanks were rolling.
To expand on my earlier example, if a US military attache in Chile forwarded reports that the Chilean Air Force had an aircraft that could fly at Mach 30, with a 20,000 km range, and could take off and land vertically I very much doubt that report would be given much credence in Washington DC.
Pardon my bold to call attention.I'm really hearing what you're saying here, at the human level. It is the human element again, that I rant on, and on and on about.
It is akin to my parents saying "Look me in the eye, so I can know you heard and understand me." It is difficult to set your entire cabinet and military apparatus in their seats and tell them to look you in the eye so you can get a hard read on whether they are actually getting it. It is hard to know if everyone gets it. Teachers suffer from this problem too. It is even much harder for everyone down the line to sit everyone else down and make sure they get it too. And on and on. Besides, "We are the mighty Solarian League. It'll work itself out. It always does."
"Well, what exactly does it mean that their missiles have more range? We've got more missiles. And more ships."
"
It means that the Manties can blow our asses up. Right along with our ships and missiles, you nitwit!"
Even with all of the facts on paper right in front of them and even if they knew that they can somehow trust all of it as facts, there would still be many Solarians who would digest the information incorrectly. "Longer range means nothing against a much bigger foe once we get inside their reach." Akin to a bruising boxer up against a taller foe with a much longer reach.
"FTL and stealth mean nothing. So what, you can see us before we see you. We are big and mighty."
Americans feel insulated by the power of its military. It'd be really hard to kill that same institutional arrogance that even we Americans have.
When the SLN attacked the Manty home system, they might have been able to do some serious damage if they had known what they were facing and sent Tamaguchi. AND, if they had been able to manage AT LEAST A LITTLE OPSEC! Even the lost city of yore, found by the Havenites, probably knew they were coming and they don't even have contact with humanity!
Can anyone remember how their Operation Raging Justice was broadcast to the galaxy? If a military can't even keep its own war plans secret, how much aptitude is it liable to display at gathering intel? Even without Malignant meddling?