ldwechsler wrote:YoR analysis is sort of cute. First of all, there are a lot of veterans around even after Laocoon. Having senior chiefs who are 35 sounds real young but it probably means they've served at least 15 years. Also, promotion had really been slow in the Manticoran Navy unless you had political clout. Honor was a new captain in her 40's, meaning she had been in the navy for well over 20 years. In peacetime, promotion was slow.
Second, the Sollies had no idea of how far behind they were because MAlign pushed the notion on them. MAlign wanted them gone, not Manticore...until the Manties had no choice. Remember, there were people who who were in the Sollie Navy who knew the analyses were wrong and they were shut down.
Tech doesn't grow itself all that fast. To build competitive ships takes a lot of new tech. And in a lot of fields.Note that even after the war between the Grand Alliance and the League had been going on, a lot of the Sollie admirals had no idea it was happening much less how bad things were going.
Even some of the best admirals (as we saw in SoV) really had no idea of how outclassed they were.
Total fiction? Read about the difference in torpedoes between the US and Japan in World War II. The Japanese "long lances". which the Japanese had from the beginning were better than what the US had even in the end. American admirals fought like crazy to defend their torpedoes even as sailors died in wholesale lots. The problems the US had in the Solomon Islands came mostly from the torpedoes. Only when the big battleships with radar directed guns combined with a heavily reinforced air grouping with improved planes did the US win.
"Cute" is an odd adjective to use. I believe that you are correct though about the manpower; Oyster Bay killed construction and support people, but not so many ship crews. Only ships being repaired might have some of their crew on board at the stations. To counteract that, there was a pool of merchantmen to draw on from the ships idled by Laocoon.
The SLN's lack of knowledge is a key point. But Malign wanted their political unit, The Renaissance Factor, to be dominant in the post war environment; that requires the Solarian League to lose in a way that causes its breakup and importantly to strike weakening blows as it goes down, so the victor retreats from power.
Concentrating on torpedoes overrates the Japanese advantage in WWII. Particularly after the US studied the captured Zero, the P-40 and Wildcat could use their armor and armament to gain a favorable kill ratio. The air war in the Pacific was being won without the battleship; a result that made the carrier the dominant weapon. When the problem with the torpedo trigger was fixed, the result did not have to be as good as the Long Lance; only good enough to sink ships.