quite possibly a cat wrote:If the Mandarins can convince the other League worlds that Manticore violated the Epsilon Eridani Edict defeating Manticore will be a trivial task. Manticore is currently placing missiles made by Beowulf in their tubes and around their planets. It would be trivial for Beowulf to sabotage the missiles and obliterate the entire Manticorian navy. As Shannon would say "Oops".
If Manticore gets solidly pinned for violating the Edict they lose.
Well at least assuming the people don't execute their government for it, which I suspect is a distinct possibility. Especially seeing as how Manticore has been saved by the Edict. The Yawata strike would have killed vastly more people if not for the League's Edict protecting Manticore. Hell, what if those stealth ships with unknown origins come back and don't feel like following the Edict the second time around? They'll need to start a bit farther out, but they aren't going to need to scout the location of planets in round two. If Manticore shows the Edict is no longer enforced Manticore is starting down the apocalypse.
I think the main problem with the propaganda aspect is that people are trying to - as the old proverb goes - 'have their cake and eat it.'
Manticore isn't going to get solidly pinned for violating the Edict, because:
a) the Mandarins work for the League, which is now at war with Manticore.
b) The people they are trying to convince (such as Beowulf) know that the League itself, through OFS, has violated the Eridani Edict. Frontier Fleet, under OFS orders, have used KEWs to destroy civilian targets for terror purposes.
c)The people in the Verge and Talbott Quadrant (and on Beowulf) are more likely to regard Mesa and the League as a bunch of liars than they are Manticore.
d) The Manticorans themselves have experience of corrupt regimes accusing their naval heroes of things they didn't do, and tend to react by supporting said hero. See Echoes of Honor.
There's also e) They Didn't Do It.
So while the propaganda may work for those who wish to be convinced by it (see also Echoes of Honor), it won't work for those who don't. Basically, you're going to end up in the same place you were when the propaganda started - one side (the GA) will believe Manticore's version. The other side (Core World League) will believe (or pretend to believe) the Mandarins and Audrey Hanrahan.
The 'have your cake and eat it' principle is particularly in operation if the Mandarins or Hanrahan try and connect Zilwicki and Cachat to Manticore and Haven (rather than Torch, which had already declared war, and was thus entitled to send enemy agents behind the lines).
Because if they connect Zilwicki on the grounds that he's a half-pay officer (if he is) and Cachat on the grounds that he's a Special Officer (which he definitely is), we really are opening the entire 'jurisdiction' can of worms. Zilwicki's entitled to be tried by RMN court martial, not under civilian law at all and Cachat - well, I'm not entirely sure Haven has changed the law that says 'Special Officers do whatever the heck they think is necessary.'
The only other jurisdiction is Mesa, currently in the process of a) suffering a major revolt and b) being invaded. Admittedly Zilwicki and Cachat are on Mesa right now, but who's going to be running the court system?
I also can't help thinking that the MAlign have been too clever for their own good. That is, they've set Manticore up as the patsy for all those nuclear explosions, but anyone who examines the locations is going to very quickly find out that the RMN appears to be incredibly incompetent. Because the bombs went off at the wrong locations - they're not targeting tactical locations, and they also make no sense for terrorising the Mesan slaveholders.
Why on Mesa would a navy come in, guns blazing, and blow up an isolated
nature reserve? Especially since the Admiral concerned has a previous reputation for surgical strikes?