Jonathan_S wrote:Sigs wrote:And sometimes even if you don't know the reward is still worth the risk. The US send a suicide mission to Japan in 1942 in the form of the Doolittle Raid, sure they had plans on getting to safety but they didn't know what they would be facing, 16 bombers against no fighters or maybe against thousands of fighters. The US military risked the lives of 80 men of the raiding party and thousands of sailors, marines and airmen in the task force that brought the bombers just because they needed a moral boost and a symbolic victory over Japan. They risked 2 carriers and at least a dozen other ships for a moral boost after Japan killed a thousands of Americans, imagine what kind of motivation the GA has when they lost 43,000,000 people at Beowulf most of them being civilians, as well as 13,000,000 at Manticore during OB and probably half that number in Grayson. When you tally their losses, sending a handful of manned ships along with enough decoys and risk a total of 500-600 people and some front line ships along with the useless decoys seems like an acceptable risk if the reward might be bringing the GA closer to the MA. Hell after so many people died from Manticore, Grayson and Beowulf I would think realistically you would be able to find 10X the number of volunteers from each service alone.
However the risk of the Doolittle raid wasn't anywhere near as high as what you're proposing. Enterprise and Hornet were ready to abandon the raid and retreat at high speed if they were detected and the chance that a Japanese carrier force would be in exactly the right place to chase them down on that retreat is pretty low.
As it was they launched earlier than planned because it was sighted by a picket boat. They were just barely within range so they launched the bombers as quickly as possible and retreated at high speed.
So while there was some risk (even well escorted carriers can run into the sights of a submarine) they were taking evasive routing and ready to run the moment they were seen - so the risk was relatively low.
Another point, the Doolittle raid had known objectives, known risks, and known return paths (if possible)
The Torch wormhole is a total unknown. If the RMN knew it was the connector to the Malign's wormhole network and homeworld, then I can see a suicide mission. But as far as they know it's just another killer wormhole . Remember - there was no record of Manpower or Mesa every using the wormhole, only rumors that it was a junction. Who doesn't try to exploit a wormhole - almost every one has "SOME" commercial value. The killer aspect alone could have described why the Torch wormhole was never exploited.
So at this point, any suicide mission would just be seen as ... total waste.