Galactic Sapper wrote:ThinksMarkedly wrote:That would mean ground-based facilities would need to be forbidden everywhere, and not just cannons and missile batteries, but also barracks, command centres, depots, etc. Requiring any defensive equipment to be located not just out of orbit low, medium, high or geostationary orbits, but a full light-second away (Moon's orbit) would mean it's unmanageable for the majority of systems that don't have sufficient space technology. I think that fails the test of reasonableness.
Nonsense. One, guess where fixed missile launchers tend to be sited? Yup, on moons. Not ground level on the planet.
Why is that? Why not set it closer to the targets that you need to defend? If you site them on a moon, then an enemy that puts itself between the satellite and your planet is now making you fire in the direction of your planet. That's a blind spot. Siting on a satellite a light-second away also introduces a two-second delay on your control loop from ground-based HQ (absent FTL comms, which no one but the GA yet has).
Also, rocky planets suitable for human habitation are actually very good sources of resources too. In our Solar System, aside of the deep gravity wells of the Sun and the gas giants, the largest concentration of minerals is on Earth. Not just the largest concentration, well over half of the mass is on Earth. The reason we today want to mine the asteroids is because for us it's difficult to launch raw materials from the bottom of our gravity well, but that doesn't seem to be a problem in the Honorverse.
Again, I don't think you have to make it easy for your enemy to hit the targets from tens of millions of km away. If you can't hit accurately from that distance and make sure you don't hit the planet or civilian infra, then come closer. Through the gauntlet of fire.
You're absolutely reveling in the human shield tactic here. You, effectively: "Sure, you can shoot the artillery I have in the hospital parking lot. But you have to get your tanks within direct fire range to do it, or else you might hit my hospital! Guess you better like having hundreds of shells raining on you while you get close!" Cue evil maniacal laughter.
No. Even under the Geneva Conventions, it's legal to flatten the damn hospital under those circumstances and the war crime is on YOU for putting your artillery there in the first place (and under a strict reading of the Conventions, it also voids the protection of every other marked medical facility you own for the duration of the conflict). That latter half has never been used to my knowledge, but for damn sure the first half has.
I agree on not having civilians as human (or treecat or other sophonts) shields, but I disagree on how close you seem to consider it. It depends on how accurate your weapons are. Suppose you have a military airfield today that is 10 km outside of a populated city, with only farmland around it (because no one but cows want to live close to the noise of jet engines). Is that a reasonable distance? That depends on how accurate your bombs are: if you're launching an ICBM that has accuracy of 25 km, you may hit 15 km into the city, which might very well be the densest populated region. Ditto for the blast radius: even if you could hit dead centre of that airfield, a nuke with a 50 km blast radius and irradiation will doom the city.
I maintain my opinion that defensive installations in orbit are ok and the attacker should close to sufficient range to make hitting them viable, all the while sustaining fire from those very same installations.
All that said, does the text actually say they pods were in actual orbit of the Manticoran planets? Or how far they were? If I were the RMN, I wouldn't put them within a light-second of where any passing freighter with myopic sensors might spot them, however good the stealth is. Given enough sensing time, passive sensors could spot light reflection from the primary and a wandering dot (or cluster of dots) is pretty noticeable. And Apollo pods don't need to be anywhere close to fire for the three hours an enemy would take to reach orbit.