quite possibly a cat wrote:...Anton, a member of Manticore's military ...
Weird Harold wrote:Anton is a former member of the RMN.
tlb wrote:As of Crown of Slaves, Zilwicki was on half pay (so not a former officer at that time); therefore I am curious when he resigned.
Bluesqueak wrote:As of Cauldron of Ghosts, Honor was referring to him as 'Mr Zilwicki', so he had resigned by then. She called Victor by his rank in the same meeting, btw.
Thank you, but I have found the following quote in Chapter 14 of Mission Of Honor:
"Look," she said, "I know the Ballroom's never been as monolithic as the public thinks. Or, for that matter, as monolithic as people like Jeremy—and you—like to pretend. I know it's riddled with splinter factions and no one ever knows when a charismatic leader's going to take some chunk of the official organization with him on his own little crusade. But the bottom line is that someone nuked Green Pines, and the way it was done is sure as hell consistent with the Ballroom's modus operandi. Aside from the nuclear element, at least!"
"Assuming the reports out of Mesa are accurate, then, yes, I'd have to agree with that," Montaigne acknowledged in that same unflinching tone. "But you're right about the Ballroom's occasional internal divisions. For that matter, I'd have to admit some of the action leaders who'd accepted Jeremy's leadership before Torch became independent are royally pissed off with him now for 'betraying the armed struggle' when he 'went legit.' At least some of them think he's sold out in return for open political power; most of them just think he's wrong." She shrugged. "Either way, though, they're hardly likely to run potential operations by him for approval."
"Or material support?"
"Torch has made its position on actively supporting strikes like this crystal clear, Elizabeth. You've heard what they've said as well as I have, and I promise you, they mean it. Like I say, Jeremy's not stupid enough not to see all the downsides of something like this."
Elizabeth tipped back her chair, regarding her "guest" with narrow eyes and scant cheerfulness. There was a certain brittleness to the office's silence, then the queen raised an eyebrow and pointed an index finger at Montaigne.
"You've been talking in generalities, Cathy," she said shrewdly. "Why aren't you being more specific about how you know Captain Zilwicki wasn't involved in this?"
So at this point after the Green Pines incident, the Queen refers to him as Captain - is he or is he not?
There has been some posts that seem to call these arguments as merely parroting Mesan propaganda or trying to paint Manticore or Haven with the terrorist brush; I very much disagree. The point is not whether Manticore or Haven has actual liability for any of the explosions on Mesa (I do not think they do), but that Mesan propaganda can correctly tie people from Haven and Manticore to the first explosions and so indirectly to the rest; thus influencing the core world reactions to the occupation of Mesa.
I do think that in an ordinary court of law (which is not going to happen) that Zilwicki and Cachet could be convicted as accessories before the fact. Despite the fact that no one wanted the explosion to hurt civilians and that no one could stop the change in plans; every member of a conspiracy is liable by association for crimes committed by a member in a planned activity by that group. Victor and Anton wanted explosives and the seccies found them, Anton disabled the tracking mechanism so the authorities could not interfere and then a seccie was given one bomb to detonate to cause confusion when Zilwicki and Cachet made their escape.
PS (added later). To be fair, neither statement about Zilwicki's rank may mean anything more than courtesy. The Queen might be using a courtesy title for someone who had once been in the Navy and Honor might be using informal address to someone she knew and formal address to Victor, who was only known by reputation.
The talk of marksmanship instructors being accessories is joking (I hope), because you need to have knowledge of an impending crime to be guilty.