NathanG wrote: think the issues with this strategy are as follows:
(1) Havenite intelligence on the Manticore Home System was necessarily much, much weaker than it was on outlying stations and allies, given the impossibility of inserting scout ships. I doubt very much that Parnell had anything like as good an idea of the size of Home Fleet or it's disposition or just how powerful the fixed defenses were as WE do.
There would be thousands of freighters going in and out of the Home System, they likely had much better intelligence on Home Fleet than the RMN had on Capital Fleet. One freighter might not have the whole picture, but 100 freighters selling you data gives you pretty good intelligence.
(2) It's true that Solarian Strategy called for an immediate, overwhelming attack on the enemy home system, but the League hadn't fought anyone except single-system, fifth rate powers in generations. Given the existence of the Alliance, Manticore was essentially a multi-system star nation, from Haven's perspective. And the strategic conventional wisdom in regards to that called for a deliberate, star-to-star advance, securing your flanks and rear as you went. (Weber talked about this here:
http://infodump.thefifthimperium.com/en ... gton/103/0). Until McQueen and White Haven reinvented the whole concept of the "deep strike", it was universally seen as foolhardy. For that matter:
Knock Manticore out of the war and the MA alliance follows along. In 1905 Erewhon had a dozen wallers and Manticore had 307 SD/DN's the other members between them I don't think had anything heavier than a heavy cruiser or BC at most.
Choice was:
a)Fight and try to capture 10 systems that represent 5% of the Alliance's industrial and economic might, or
b)Fight and capture a system with 95% of the Alliances industrial might.
(3) A deep strike strategy before MDMs or missile pods is going to be VERY, VERY risky. The developments of 1905-1922 really shifted the balance of power away from the defensive, but I think we can forget how much weaker a Havenite or Manticorian SD was at the start of the war in terms of firepower. They would have had a much harder time taking out those forts than I think you're expecting.
Haven went to war with Manticore, so they had to have expected to be able to take those forts out otherwise no matter how long the war and no matter how costly if the junction forts were so invincible Haven might as well have kept their fleet at home.
(4) Even if they win the Battle of Manticore, they still have to keep control of the system from inevitable counterattacks. Most of the RMN would still be alive, and it would have a multi-planet support structure, while the People's Navy would have been gutted in a best-case scenario.
Capture the Manticore HS and if you can't keep it blow up all the industry on your way out, war is over. Swing by Yeltsin and Hancock/Zanzibar/Alizon/York with overwhelming force until you crush those forces and you end up with 1/3 of the RMN destroyed, if you can hit the HS with whatever you have left if you think you have enough ships.
Sure, the advantage would lie with Haven, especially if they were able to destroy the system infrastructure, but then you have to administer a VERY restive empire (including some VERY restive new acquisitions) with a Navy that's been smashed. Not to mention that the casualty figures would have seriously undermined the government's legitimacy. Remember, the Legislativists were more worried about domestic unrest and opposition than they were about foreign attacks. (Rightfully, as it turned out).
And the prize was the junction, once Home Fleet is smashed, any large concentration of RMN wallers in the Alliance is smashed, Eventually the remaining RMN ships run out of supplies and ammunition or require refit/repair. Haven still has their Yards, Manticore won't.
(5) Obviously it looks better in hindsight, but it's a high-risk, high-reward gambit. If Parnell and Harris had known how outclassed they were? Maybe they'd have gambled everything. But from their perspective, the military situation was very favorable. If this went wrong, they'd lost the bulk of their Navy (and the war) in a single afternoon, and they had no way of knowing for sure that it wouldn't. The risk were far to high to justify it, given what they knew at the time.
The problem was that they tried to secure victory on the cheapest conditions possible. Send such an overwhelming force that any enemy would be quickly overwhelmed. In Yeltsin they assumed their intelligence was right so they send a fleet with barely 2 to 1 advantage in wallers only to be ambushed by a fleet with equal numbers. If they had send 150 SD's and 40 DN's backed by as many BB's as they can gather and attacked Yeltsin they would have crushed the 32 SD's they though were there and they still would have crushed the 96 SD's that were actually there. Unless the RMN's wallers proved to be twice as powerful as the PN's Haven would win at the end. If the RMN's ships proved to be twice as strong as Haven's then Haven should have just started to draft their terms of surrender.[/quote]