DP82ABN wrote:In A Call To Vengeance Travis Long was discussing the IAN BB Vergeltung. "Her electronics were cutting edge. He hadn't personally examined her missiles, but they were listed as Starstorms, the same round the SLN had used as recently as twelve T-years ago".
This indicates that the IAN is vastly ahead of Manticore and even missiles and software 2 generations behind the Starstorms would be at or better than anything Mercenaries like the unlamented Volsung's would be able to get without direct transfers from Axelrod. As a professional mercenary himself, Emperor Gustav would know exactly what it would take to move Manticore's ships from mothballed/limited service to fully active service(other than crew). In fact, it would essentially cost him nothing as everything to maintain and repair a fleet had already been captured and at least some, if not most, was hauled away. Even for the IAN having 5 systems, they are not all hugely profitable systems, so the electronics and supplies captured at Walther would have been too usable and valuable to simply nuke. 9 freighters would have been able to each only carry a small part of their load as human prisoners as there simply was not enough life support for all of their capacity to be used for people. So why not load them up with anything and everything valuable?
I mentioned that same thing at the time the book came out - especially since several of the DDs were the same classes that Manticore fielded, and there were several portable shipyards at the station. Manticore should have claimed at least a ship or 2 as reparations for the initial strike.
I argrued that someone should have at least run through the warehouse grabbing ever damned "hex" in the facility for all the ballyhoo that was made about them in the earlier books. Not to mention as many missile and CMs as possible to replace those lost during the Battle of Manticore (and to fill the mags on the dozens of Manti ships which were never full.)
However, it was pointed out, rightfully so, that from the point of view of the Casey and the Andermani, they had missed the heavy units of the Volsungs, and should that heavy squadron return, the Andermani would have another serious fight on their hands, and they would be at the maneuver disadvantage at the heart of a grav well with a BB. Our protagonists had no idea if they missed a out system picket and if (or when) reinforcements would be returning. The Andermani and the Casey didn't know the full size of the Volsung fleet, only that the BCs and most of the CAs (which were observed at Manticore) were missing. They had no idea that the bulk of them were way over in Havenite space entering a trap under the guise of an upgrade.
It was also pointed out that this is the 1600s -the Casey is alone, 6 months away from a home port and at the end of it's logistical string. It's only a Light Cruiser, without gobs of extra crew to run prizes (who were already down for repairs for some reason) for 6 months.
For the Andermani, these ships where technologically a step (or 2) down. The Andermani had superior home built ships that had their own local supply line. Adding extra, foreign designs may be against their thinking at this time because it may cause unwanted supply and support issues.
As it sat, if they had waited only a couple hours, Linn's mop up force would have caught them at the base and attacked them to keep the knowledge of who hired the Volsungs from getting out. The Andermani made clear they planned to pull out quickly no matter what, if the Casey had stayed behind, it would have been exposed and vulnerable.
However, I still feel they should have jumped a handful of prizes to a nearby system and powered them down in an asteroid field and returned at a later date with crews to bring them home. If nothing else, the Manties should have insisted on a Freighter and fill it full of spares (Missiles, CMs, parts) or grab one of the collapsable shipyards and throw it in the frieghter. Or tow ships or shipyards to the edge of the system outside the hyperlimit and hide it there for a return expedition. Heck, just returning and stripping the magazines of the ships would have been worth the cost of the expedition.