cthia wrote:cthia wrote:
Ah, close to Havenite space. There it is! Somehow I missed that. I was under the impression that it was closer to Manty space, but exited deep into Havenite space. You filled in a lot of my holes. I know that w/o Trevor's Star a lengthy trip would have been needed and no support from Home Fleet and its supply chain.
At any rate, all thru White Haven's prolonged engagement of Trevor's Star, I kept thinking that the Star Kingdom could have directed all of that metal towards Noveau Paris, instead. I'm sure it only appeared that way to me, but it seemed like Esther cost White Haven enough firepower to take Noveau Paris alone! LOL
"White Haven, didn't your gf tell you that this is going to cost you, dearly?," says Esther.
Jonathan_S wrote:I did a quick look on the Honorverse wiki (so standard warning apply) but Trevor's Star is about 200 light years from Manticore while Nouveau Paris is about 300.
That makes it sound like you could send those forces against Haven instead, but the distance from the closest support base is much different. Manticore had spent the immediate pre-war time, and during the war building, up supply and repair bases between Manticore and the front so most ships didn't have to cycle all the way back to Manticore for repair and resupply.
Lunging another 100 or so LY beyond that support would have been very risky. Also the Haven System home fleet was large enough that the fleet that took Trevor's Star almost certainly wouldn't have been able to defeat it.
Now if Manticore knew that the podnaughts would be along in several more years, that they'd be as effective as they turned out to be, and that Haven would have stayed on the defensive until then - they could have preserved their forces, left Trevor's Star alone, and let 8th fleet's podnaughts go strait to Nouveau Paris and blow everything away with their MDMs.
But that's a hell of a gamble. Better to grab Trevor's Star while you could, vastly shorten and secure the supply line, and be better positioned if they need to continue the conventional attacks.
Thanks Jonathan. Whitehaven needed way too much support handling Esther McQueen that if he would have opted for Nouveau Paris instead w/o Hemphill's new bag of tricks, probably
would have been suicide. It just seemed like he wasted an awful lot of firepower during that protracted engagement trying to take it, that my sensibilities kept screaming. . .
"
Give up Hamburger Hill you pill, and go directly for the kill!"
Going directly for the kill is what he was finally prepared to do until Saint-Just pulled a Kim Jong-un on him! LOL
If the objective would have been Haven orbit from the get-go, it might've run out the clock and preempted Saint-Just's ploy.
And if White Haven had possessed a crystal ball and Honor had been able to read tea leaves, maybe they might have done that.
Look, a whole big part of the series is that the entire warfighting paradigm has been
changing from the very first battle in OBS on. That's what happens in wars against peer competitors. You find out a bunch of the stuff you thought would work won't, that stuff you never thought of
will, that the tools you're being given change with breathtaking speed once the shooting actually starts (especially if you've been doing a heck of a lot of pre-war R&D nobody knew about), and that you frigging
never know enough when it comes to either tactical
or strategic planning.
That's . . . what . . . happens . . . in . . . wars.
Did anyone miss the fact that throughout the last third of OBS Honor
was doing the worst thing she possibly could have done There she is, frantically trying to stop this much more powerful Q-ship, getting her crew slaughtered with the utmost courage and gallantry . . . and all the Peep skipper is trying to do is to get to the rendezvous
to call the operation off. The problem was that she had to go with the info she had and a worst-case assumption. She did that with perfect intelligence (as in smarts) and supreme dedication
and she never, ever learned that so many of her crew were killed (in real terms) for nothing. In fact, her very success is what
guaranteed that the Peep task force that eventually stopped by for a "courtesy call" didn't simply turn around and go home without ever putting in an appearance.
Similar situation in HotQ when she goes against her instincts and
doesn't close with
Thunder of God while the Masadan crew is running the ship with the training manuals open in their laps.
She didn't know. If she had known, she'd have closed in and killed the damned ship before they ever figured out which way was up and her losses would probably have been immensely lower.
If White Haven had known about the MDMs and the podnoughts ---
and how effective the untried and untested system was going to be, his tactics would have been different from the get-go. If the Manties had realized Theisman's navy had MDMs and podnoughts of its own before Thunderbolt, the outcome at places like Grendelsbane would have been very different. If the RMN had truly realized how effective its fleet logistics train was, they might have skipped Trevor's Star. or, having taken it and moved their "rear area" deep into pre-war Havenite territory, they might have opted for a deep strike on Nouveau Paris. If they'd been positive of how effective the new weapons were going to prove before they were actually deployed in Buttercup, they wouldn't have bothered with Duquesene Base; they'd've gone straight for Nouveau Paris and ended the war.
At every single stage of these books, there was
always a better option for the planners, good guys or bad guys, than the one they ultimately took . . . but they didn't
kmow it.
Discussion of positive alternative tactics is all well and good, but the only two valid meter sticks are:
(1) What did the commanders know and how intelligently did they act
given what they knew, and
(2) Did it work.
The one thing I will guarantee you --- and I hope to hell it shows in the books --- is that no decent commander on either side was ever indifferent to the losses his forces suffered or determined to do one centimeter less than his/her duty.