Armed Neo-Bob wrote:
You are being a bit unfair. Roger wrote that bit in the Proceedings after a number of private briefings from SIS and likely FO intel folks about Haven's build-up. Which was already what, forty years along? Haven was almost ready to pull the trigger on their expansion. His mother, unlike King Michael, didn't allow him to remain ignorant of things, whereas Michael allowed Edward to slide. After Michael told Edward he was going to retire fairly soon, he got with the program.
Actually, his father tells him he's going to be king fairly soon at the end of
A Call To Duty - and Edward is still ignoring the palace's daily briefings at the beginning of
A Call To Arms.Armed Neo-Bob wrote:Neither of them really wanted the King-in-Waiting role, though, and until they took his destroyer away, Roger was spending his time chasing pirates, not attending cabinet meetings.
Roger: I know it might help in some ways to have me available to trot out for debates. But .... I can do more good arguing the case from inside the Service. ... someone's got to ... convince the Navy's senior officers it's a good idea.
Not quite chasing pirates, is it?
Armed Neo-Bob wrote:And as for seeing his naval service as a prep for a king leading a nation at war? Totally unfair. Nothing in the "daily briefs" given to King Michael had anything to do with an upcoming war, and they already outgunned all their neighbors but Haven. So how, exactly, does he "lack a strategic sense"?
I didn't say that Edward was failing to prep for war. He failed to prepare for being
King. That's textev. He doesn't even bother to read his dispatches from the palace.
Armed Neo-Bob wrote:As far as 'standing up to Breakwater' goes, Breakwater has a near majority in the Lords, the kingdom is not very old, and Eliz. I had a lot of children. Breakwater and his allies could have forced a change of monarch if Edward pushed him hard enough; and like that "Duke" that engineered the assassination attempt on Adrienne, some of his cousins would have been happy to take over. At that time, all finance bills and budgets HAVE to start in the Lords; the King doesn't write the budget. To get the Navy funded when the majority was voting it down is a real problem, and I doubt Breakwater allowed anything beyond an emergency appropriations bill to repair the current damages as soon as possible. You are talking politicians taking immediate action; you haven't allowed time for all the hot air to dissipate. Breakwater's Blimp is still manoevering for position.
All true, but again - textev. I've already quote the 'backbone' comment by Osterman. Then there's Winterfell thinking that
By all logic Breakwater should have been booted already.
Armed Neo-Bob wrote:There weren't "a couple of times" when he interfered with Locatelli; it was once, over the potential use of the destroyers to pretend to be BCs. If it didnt work, the Ship's impellors fail, and the Kingdom dies. He insisted that he be kept in the loop and wanted to vet the deployments. He was Commander in Chief; at war; and a former naval officer, so he knew personally a lot of the people deploying. The situation was new; unexpected; and I notice that Locatelli had already done what was necessary, anyway.
The incident in the snippets was the second time.
From A Call To Arms:
"Signal Admiral Locatelli that we're sending them out",[Vanguard and Nike] he said. Technically, he knew, Locatelli should be the one making this decision, not the King and the First Lord.
Armed Neo-Bob wrote:You might also consider that another reason Roger was so good was that the dynasty probably kept diaries; so he gets the benefit of not being the first . . . .
YMMV
Rob
Actually, I think its because the Wintons and the Treecats had discovered each other by Roger's time.
Every time they try to do something selfish, unkingly or stupid, their furry little henchman whacks them on the head...