locarno24 wrote:Completely agree. But - and I realise this is one of those "hindsight is 20/20" moments - you're not going to take Manticore without having that fight.
I guess that was the whole thing about Odysseus; IF they could take Basilisk without a war, then you get access to the Silesian region without then passing Manticoran territory. So it's an awfully attractive option, but it relies on that horrible and almost never correct assumption politicians love of "Don't Worry, We Won't Really Have To Fight And It'll All Be Over By Christmas".
If you start with "we need to take Manticore", which WAS Parnell's objective as of the briefing at the start of On Basilisk Station, then pretty much every option other than "a direct assault" is almost always provably worse by pretty simple logic.
And Parnell was right. Going after Silesia was just be kicking the can down the road. Manticore wasn't going to suddenly disappear and it had been building up its navy for 50 years. There may be a limit to what they could build, but clearly it hadn't been reached in 1901. At best, going after Silesia gives you the economic breath to build up the PRN even further, so it could actually face the RMN from a position of overwhelming superiority.
But as I argued, Silesia wouldn't have been a walk in the park. First, the SCN was probably the toughest navy would have had to fight anyway. And second, it would bring them in close contact with the IAN, which really wasn't a push-over. Brokering a deal with the Andermani to partition the Confederacy wouldn't have worked (as we know it didn't in 1919). Going after Silesia might have actually been worse, because the RMN would definitely not sit it out and then the PRN is fighting both the RMN and the IAN, with much longer supply lines.
But the decision wasn't military, it was political. Odysseus was possibly just a compromise that had huge potential benefits, a good chance for success, and little risk of escalating further.
Yeah. I think you're probably right. I'm sure that there were junction forts at that point too, but essentially, the best, most logical approach was essentially to take Trevor's Star in 1883 and just keep going. Manticore would have been a huge, painful fight, but at that point it could have been knocked over.
On the other hand, I guess at that point we don't know how much of the Havenite Wall is committed to other fronts on the DuQuense Plan at the same time. If it's engaged in a dozen pacification operations it might not have been able to concentrate force (which would explain the 'invade on the cheap' plan).
That was not their
modus operandi. The PRH annexed a system, digested it, grew the PRN, then went for the next. It had been working, so why not continue?
Another factor is that they had just engineered Roger III's death. They were counting on Elizabeth III not continuing the build up, possibly even reducing, at which point it would have been a much easier annexation.
And as you said, we don't know what the Havenite Wall was at the time. From kzt's post, the Duquesne-class SD had just come online, so they were still building the wall up. The RMN was already a tough fight, so they must have been planning on outpacing the RMN build up before the actual confrontation.
In Yeltsin the error isn't detaching Theisman's ships - if he'd been in the initial assault he'd be dead too; when you put battleships in energy range of superdreadnoughts the numerical odds don't matter much - but the fact that Thurston didn't try to confirm what he was seeing with recon drones. Yes, Flag in Exile says pushing drones past the GSN's point defence would have been hard, but that's the point - the very act of forcing the ex-PN SDNs to employ their awesome point defence would have been a signal flare of "holy beep what just happened! That was NOT a battlecruiser!". Given that the whole plan is not supposed to be subtle and rests on THERE ARE NO NASTY SURPRISES HERE, you'd think the PN formation would be spawning drones from the moment it left hyper.
He also - as Theisman says - doesn't try to hold the range open when for once the PN has the superior numbers of heavier missiles (it thinks).
No, but doubling the number of battleships would have hurt the GSN more. They did lose one SD, so a more concentrated field might have killed another or two. Plus, having Theisman nearby may have made a difference in tactics, as he had Shannon aboard and she was the first one to notice that the "BCs" were forming a wall.
More likely, that might have had little immediate impact and the war could still finish as it did, but there could be no Honor and no Theisman for later on. Neither were that important to their services yet, but with no Theisman to continue McQueen's work, Saint-Just wouldn't be dead. And with no Honor, there would be no one to save QE3 and Protector Benjamin when the Masadans struck and killed Cromarty. High Ridge would have accepted the peace offer anyway.
Or maybe without Honor, Elizabeth and Cromarty may have never travelled to Grayson in the first place. And then White Haven arrives with Eighth Fleet in Nouveau Paris in 1915.