Sigs wrote:My understanding of the plan involved weakening the SEM and forcing a fight between them and the League in which the RMN is forced to crush the SLN fracturing the League but exhausting themselves and their means of defence. Once the RMN is near defenceless because even if they got their missile production going in 10 months or less it would only be a fraction of their pre-OB production so they will have used everything they had to keep the SLN at bay which would have given the Republic an opening to hit the SEM. Once Manticore falls, the Republic would be to busy incorporating as much of its territory as it can (Talbot, Silesia and the allies) and wouldn’t have any attention to spare for the League. With the League potentially fractured into hundreds of independent nations the RF has a chance to unite.
Please see the other thread on what we think the plan is and the fact we think it's rather off the rails. Your comments to the discussion would be really good.
Weakening the SEM and forcing a fight between the SEM and the League is already a revised plan. The original plan was for Haven to fight the League. The revisions started when the SKM defeated the PRH in the first war. Oyster Bay, though revised itself, was still meant to get Haven to win the war. One of the Detweilers (Albrecht, I think) clearly says they expected Pritchart to force surrender, not ally itself with Elizabeth. Which means that the confrontation they'd started between Manticore and the League wouldn't translate to the war they needed. So even after Oyster Bay, there would have been years, possibly a decade, before that phase of the plan arrived.
Sigs wrote:But at the same time, Mannerheim consistently missing a good chunk of their fleet because it is deployed to guard the other end of the wormhole of Torch would raise sucpisions especially if they have had to do it for a decade or more. And by secret I mean they are hidden, not shown until they are needed. Not being able to explain where at least 8 of your BC’s are at anyone time for decades would be suspicious, maybe not at the time but it sure would raise some flags when the GA starts digging. Not to mention the fact that you have to have a reliable crew for each and every one of those BC’s and reliable crews for every other ship that relieves them. Unless there was something valuable in the system that could justify 8 BC’s as a picket or the Mannerheim fleet was numbered in the hundreds of BC’s where one squadron missing would not be a big deal but it still leaves the reliable crew question.
And you have to rotate the picket home eventually, you cant set up a picket for long term without this getting out and the GA sending a ship or two to investigate this “secret” wormhole. Even when Torch was under Mesa’s control you would still want a picket there just in case. Rotating ships through this deployment for any length of time even if its only the 3 years since Torch was liberated it would mean you have to rotate at LEAST 3 squadrons in which still leaves the crew’s of 24 BC’s with the knowledge of a “secret” wormhole. How long before someone brags at a bar or a party somewhere that in early 1921 they were in a battle while guarding a secret wormhole terminus? And how long before one of the GA’s intelligence services manages to get a sniff of that? At this point with the RF being an independent nation if I were the GA I would make sure that we have intelligence assets on the ground in the main systems of that nation. The battle that they hear about coincides with Harvest Joy going missing, soon enough they cut back through the bullshit and exaggerations and they have all they need “secret wormhole, picket squadron, date of contact”. If you have ships that are not in the public eye and crews that don’t officially belong to you it works, otherwise you leave scarps even if you feed your crews some BS about guarding important economic assets.
Sorry, there are two problems with that argument: "consistently" and "good chunk". The Mannerheim picket of The Twins was neither consistent nor a good chunk of the fleet. It was a squadron of BCs and we know Mannerheim had an outsized Navy, so I expect this means a dozen or two SDs. And it was deployed only around the time the Harvest Joy was expected to transit. The transit was well-publicised, so the MAlign and Mannerheim had enough notice to know to deploy the special squadron, with trustworthy crews. No one is going to transit a wormhole they don't have navigational data for, so there was no danger before the Harvest Joy.
Having 8 BCs disappear for a bit of time is no big deal. You tell the galaxy that it's exercise manoeuvres and you hide the squadron's deployment in an actual, larger exercise of your fleet. Benjamin got away with it twice with the Protector's Own. The crews themselves have to be somewhat trustworthy: as I said, they know about the wormhole and that it is a secret, but they just don't know the real reason why.
But you're right that that third shift impeller tech may brag at a bar and cause the intelligence services to find out what really happened to the Harvest Joy. The problem is only that right now the GA and the SL have no reason to suspect Mannerheim and the RF are connected to the MAlign.
Sigs wrote:What I mean is that if you estimate that your “d-day” would be in 1950 and you need to start the process in 1920 to be fully ready for 1950 I would start in 1890. This gives you more wiggle room, if you need to kick it off early, you have the ships, the crews and the capacity to build more ships and train more crew, if you need to hold off for a couple of decades extra this gives you more time to prepare your crews, increase the size of your navy. If I need to be at work for 6:30 am and to be 5 minutes early I need to leave at 5:50 am I plan on leaving at 5:40 am so that I have some room for traffic, construction etc… and this is for 40 min ahead, when they are planning in centuries rather than minutes, hours , days or months the fudge factor has to be in dacades since only an idiot would have a rock solid plan that gives no wiggle room and worse would instigate a war with a powerful and extremely pissed off enemy and leave the initiative entirely in the hands of that enemy for dacades.
You can't do this
ad infinitum. If you calculated that 5:50 am was sufficient and added 10 minutes of buffer, why can't they have done the same? If they thought they needed the fleet in 1950, calculated they could get there by starting the ramp up in 1925, so they started in 1915. Seems sufficient to me and aligned with the information we have.
Sigs wrote:Having 500 SD(P)’s at the Havenite Level or better and discovering the spider drive wouldn’t make their fleet obsolete, it would make it more flexible, you have ships that are proven to be able to go toe to toe with the enemy and you have a secret weapon that can sneak into a system ahead of your main force and sow confusion and destruction in the enemy before battle is even joined. Whats better is you have a doctrine that already works when you take the doctrine from the RMN and RHN and add your own touch to it. As it stands the MAN is planning a war with unproven ships with a radically different doctrine than anyone else in history and banking on the enemy not being able to find a way to get them on sensors. If their ships don't measure up or their doctrine doesn't measure up or the enemy finds a solution to the spider drive they are in serious trouble.
True, except they can't have neither 500 SD(P)s nor at the Havenite level. So that's a moot point. They've know about SD(P)s since 1914, but without MDMs, those aren't very useful. The technology they have access to wouldn't make 500 SDs much of a fight against the RMN or RHN. And I maintain I don't think they have 500: at best, I think they have two squadrons.