Frank777 wrote:Jonathan_S wrote:Now you can argue that someone should have thought of that risk and mobbed every ship emerging anywhere near the planet with the reaction forces and RDs they planned to use for the hyper emergency ghosts - but given the likely traffic of Beowulf you'd need many hundreds of destroyers doing nothing but swarming legit traffic to search for ultra-stealthy items they might have dropped; whether before or after you intercepted them. You rapidly run into resource limitations trying to monitor every single ship to that level.
Most of what you write is sensible, but here we disagree. The only thing needed was to put some form of defense next to the Mycroft systems. After all, Honor Harrington once shot down similar Republican systems using lasers added to their explorer drones.
What kind of defense do you envision that's going to survive what seems to be a CL level grazer seemingly materializing out of nowhere? At the likely range it's going off that's dumping a lot more power than a laserhead.
Active defenses are pointless (and the Keyhole II half of the Mycroft platform is already covered with PDLCs. But it's vaporized before it can return fire. If you had a separate defense platform floating out there I guess it could kill the Silver Bullet drones in retaliation - but since the Mycroft blows up with the first shot your FTL network is still dead...
About the only thing I can think of that would work is to wrap each one in a small fort with very thick passive defenses and a bubble sidewall. That should survive single grasers - but would increase the cost and manufacture time sufficiently that Beowulf wouldn't have had their Mycroft system built and installed yet when the attack came...
Is there some defense I'm overlooking that would have kept the platforms alive after each was hit with a total surprise attack?
Basically the way I look at it Beowulf and Manticore knew that Apollo alone with lightspeed control would be adequate against most imaginable attacks, but Mycroft would reduce the number of missiles you needed to expend to defeat any given attack. So go for the quick lash-up deployment and if it works, great, if it fails or if it gets taken out you've still got all those Apollo pods that can function adequately even at extreme ranges. Then over time improve Mycroft and make it more redundant and defensible.
I don't think there's anybody in the know in Manticore of Beowulf who would have said the system they had when the SLN came over the wall was final or ideal. It was just the quickest they could get an interim upgrade field deployed. Sometimes that works amazingly and sometimes that blows up in your face -- but as long as you don't require it to survive it can still be worth trying good now versus perfect later.