Sigs wrote:I am not saying that it was aimed at the MA, what I am saying is that the SEM was at war, they had bigger fish to fry and they could have wanted to keep it quiet, or on the flip side one of the other powers that support Torch could have send a ship to survey the WH. If they send ships to survey the WH without giving notice they could have been on the other side, did their thing and been back to torch before anyone even knew they were there. At the time they didn't know anything about the MA, but they may very well have been really curious after OB, second BoM and formation of the GA.
The SEM was at war
with the other power backing Torch. There was no way to keep the survey expedition a secret: you can't survey in the Congo System without the Torch Government knowing about it (not if you still want their trust) and you can't keep the Havenite government from knowing about it since they were also part of that government. Namely (literally!) Victor Cachat.
So the only way any survey could have been done was in the open, with both Manticore and Haven (and Erewhon) knowing about it.
I am condemning characters from making assumption they had not enough facts to make. If you don't know what the enemies goal was you cannot make an assumption on their capabilities based on wild guess. The character's assumption might very well be true but it is based on flawed reasoning. Like I have explained my point previously the why is the most important question to answer before you make assessment on the enemies fleet strength, making an assumption that the enemy didn’t have enough ships to destroy RMN and GSN Home Fleets, Third Fleet and the industry at the WH and Trevor’s star without knowing the actual goal of the attack is extremely dangerous.
You are condemning them for failing to make an assumption based on facts they had not yet had. In other words, you're expecting them to be omniscient or at least clairvoyant.
At the time the survey was started, soon after the liberation of Congo, they only thought that Manpower was a particularly unscrupulous company that did control Jessyk via shady deals and influence. They had not yet put together the necessary data to show that Manpower wasn't operating like a company, but instead like a nation-sate. And they certainly had not yet gone to Mesa to collect more data, much less come back from it. There was no reason to suspect there was a fleet strength to be taken into account, that the other side might be picketed round-the-clock by something heavy enough to deal with a cruiser.
They did certainly think it was weird that Manpower had not exploited the wormhole. Any wormhole is an economic boon, so it would stand to reason a company would want to extract every bit of profit from it, by getting traffic through it. That Manpower had not done so meant it either had not yet surveyed it (weird, unlikely, but possible) or that it had but had not found anything that would be of interest to its bottom line, so they downplayed the utility of the wormhole (the likely scenario), or a third option, that which it was a good connection for slave trade but they didn't want the galactic powers to now where it led to. The third option, which is the closest to reality, is a possibility but again unlikely for a
company.
It’s not about being omniscient, its about not making guesses and directing policy based on those guesses if they are just a guess. Might as well go to a fortune teller and use their Christal ball to make your decisions.
You can only make decisions based on the facts you do have. You cannot make decisions based on pie-in-the-sky wild guesses. Anyone who in 1921 had suggested that there was a 600-year-old conspiracy behind Manpower to overthrow the Solarian League and rule mankind by way of genetic supermen would have been laughed out of court. The Sollies did laugh when the GA proposed that very thought in May 1922.
Ultimately they announced it but designing your defence based on the assumption that the enemy will announce all of their moves regarding the WH well ahead of time so you can mount a defence seems kind of stupid. The way Torch is being right between the Manticore Alliance and the Republic politically, anything could have happened including an announcement too late to do anything about it.
Again, who's the enemy here? If you're referring to the Kingdom of Torch's enemy, until mid-1921, they only thought the enemy was a corporation that made
profit by exploiting genetic slavery. All decisions and predictions fall from the decision-tree leading to profit motive. Yes, it was a flawed assumption, but they didn't have any reason to suspect it was flawed. Only around that time did they start to suspect there was something rotten in the State of Mesa, but they didn't know what. Either way, that was already too late: the Harvest Joy was on-station and doing survey before Operation Rat Poison.
If you're referring to Manticore and its enemy (Haven), see above for the impossibility of conducting the research in secret.
My thinking is that when Congo was lost they quickly stood up picket without waiting for Manticore, Haven or Erewhon to announce survey. By the time they announced it, even with the MA’s speed advantage they could still be too late to stop the survey and once the location of the system is known any subsequent losses could have been met with a division of SD(P)’s when available to visit that system the long way around.
I agree they either got the picket on-station or ready to go there. Mannerheim had been picketing Felix for a decade or two already. Getting a ship to transit from Felix to The Twins is a 5-minute job. A BC squadron probably took a day to craft orders and select the right squadron.
But it could not have been too late. There was an absolute minimum amount of time that the Harvest Joy would have spent surveying in Torch. And given that the MAlign knew that they would find the anomalous gravitational data, they also knew it would be an extended survey.
My entire point was that they had to set up a picket in the system as soon as they lost Congo. At which point they would have had to maintain a constant picket since 1919 which was the whole argument because maintaining a picket for 2 years required rotating ships out by 1923 its 4 years which means that they have to rotate ships at least 2 times more likely 4 times and missing 8 BC’s in most navies would have been enough to raise some questions when the GA eventually got around to searching. Unless they made the arrogant assumption that there would be no one around to investigate then they are leaving a lot of breadcrumbs in terms of ships missing for months/years on a secret mission requiring several thousand crew members to be either all reliable or somehow kept in the dark. The SLN can get away with deploying 8 BC's in a system and rotate them for decades without anyone noticing because they had somewhere in the neighbourhood of 3-4 thousand BC's but anyone with less then 200 BC's will have a heck of a time keeping it quiet especially if the entire crew of each and every ship was not 100% in on it and kept from talking.
Both Bob and I agree that they probably set up a picket. But I don't think 8 BCs would have been immediately noticeable nor would they need to set up immediately after losing the system. See above why it any transit would have taken considerable time from the loss of the system.
And once the survey expedition
was publicised, keeping tabs on it became that much easier. Its research was probably shared with at least 5 different governments and the MAlign did have spies on the ground on Torch. So they only needed to detach a squadron once the risk of transit crossed a certain threshold.
To minimise the chance of discovery, the Mannerheim Navy probably deployed picket squadrons to multiple termini of the Felix Junction (it has 4 in total, including Darius). That way, any crew who asked wouldn't know why The Twins was particularly singled out, because it wasn't. Mannerheim had already been picketing Felix for a decade, so any operations and logistic people back on their homeworld would not ask weird questions why either.
Mannerheim had one of the biggest SDFs in the League, so making a couple of squadrons of BCs disappear from the public eye shouldn't be too difficult. If we assume they had two dozen SDs, then they probably had at least 4 times as many BCs. At any point in time, half of them are deployed somewhere, the rest either in their Home Fleet or laid up for refit and maintenance. And there are thousands of BCs flying around, so the MA could certainly slip Mannerheim a few more from Darius using those shipyards you argued they must have had. A bit of creative accounting by an MA plant in the Mannerheim Navy and no one knows their actual force strength.
That doesn't mean it went out without a hitch. We just haven't been told if something did happen.