Sigs wrote:What was the reason to launch Cutworm Operations? What was Manticore trying to accomplish? Why select those targets? Why such a small 8th Fleet?
What was the reason to launch Cutworm? To keep the RHN off-balance, having to spread their forces thin to parry any assault which they didn't know where would land. In that sense, it was a success: no major RHN operations were launched between Thunderbolt and Beatrice. It also restored the initiative to the MA.
Why select those targets? They were targets the RHN could not ignore, they had to defend. They were not critical like Haven or Bolthole, but important enough it could not yield without a fight.
Why such a small Eighth Fleet? It was all the MA could put together.
Yeah, so you go with the forces and plan you already had rather than try to gather more of your fleet before you launch the operation.
Yes, when time is of essence.
Beatrice was planned with a fallback for the Republic, meaning the rest of the fleet, if things went wrong there would still be a fleet to defend the republic. Lovat changed the urgency but that same urgency prevented them from gathering more of a force.
Planning an operation that would leave you with 185 fully operational SD(P)'s and 100 SD(P)'s working in the event of a complete destruction while you have the edge in ships is a good way to get fired. Before Lovat the RHN had the ships to go on an offensive, with a fleet of 335 SD(P)'s they could have launched a general offensive against Trevor's Star, left a picket and their damaged ships, reorganize and go after each of the Alliance members. Once 3rd and 8th Fleets are destroyed move towards Grayson and take out the GSN Home Fleet and its 50-60 SD(P)'s. The RHN has at that point taken out 130 Alliance SD(P)'s in 2 individual battles each with overwhelming force all with nothing more then 50-60 damaged or destroyed SD(P)'s. Instead you are telling me that the RoH instructed the RHN to deploy between 55% and 80% depending on which numbers you take on a winner take all operation.
I agree with your first paragraph and disagree with the second. If Theisman said that there was a good chance the forces sent to Manticore could extricate themselves, he had very good reason to believe so. He wasn't padding the numbers or trying to tell Pritchart what she wanted to hear. He was being honest. And as I said before: he was right, until Apollo changed everything.
Attacking Trevor's Star does not achieve Beatrice's objectives: it does not end the war. Even trashing Grayson is doubtful that could end the war. Trashing the Manticoran shipyards, preferably with Home Fleet as a bonus, would.
He might have had another plan in the lines of what you're describing. Chapter 54 starts with him telling Pritchart of two of the plans they had, which means they had more. He just chose to brief Prichart on the two he thought she most needed to know: Beatrice and Camille (that alone tells me there was another one with a woman's name starting with A). Camille was a response to an attack but not serious escalation; they'd respond showing that they were clearly holding back so pretty please come back to the negotiating table. Beatrice was for all the marbles. There must have been something in-between.
My main point is that the Alliance was fighting from a position of weakens, not a position of equality or slightly behind numerically, they were trying to force the RHN to redeploy to cover their rear systems in order to dissipate their offensive force. I believe that the Alliance SD(P)'s were about 1.3 to 1 when compared to the RHN SD(P)'s, so the 420 SD(P)'s would be able to take on the entire operational RHN for dinner and then take the 100 or so SD(P)'s working up for desert.
I agree: the MA was operating from a position of weakness, which is why Honor was getting all the new construction as fast as it could be rushed to her. She was doing all her tactical brilliance allowed her to keep the RHN off-balance.
But the MA did not have 420 SD(P)s. See
Fleet Strengths in 1920 where it adds up to only 232, with most of the RMN's SD(P) only Medusas. There was new construction since this datum and the planning of Beatrice, I agree, but there were also losses. Theisman says the MA had lost 20 SD(P)s since Thunderbolt. Furthermore, there were three home systems to protect, not just one, and most of the Andermani wall of battle wasn't able to fight.
If they had 300 SD(P) -- which they didn't -- they d need a 2:1 superiority in technology to take on the 520 fully combat-effective RHN SD(P)s, and that's if the 100 others working up didn't throw a wrench in the plans.
It doesn't matter if he could have escaped, when planning I wouldn't assume that I will get at least 1/3 of my force back. That's like sending TF 12.3 to Hancock with the expectation that you get it back or most of it because they are going up against only 5 SD's and getting only 18% of your force come back with significant damage without even engaging the main enemy fleet. Any number of things could have happened that demolished their fleet, so counting it with the total of what you will have available to defend your territory seems a little presumptuous of Theisman.
I understand you wouldn't. But Theisman did and he said so himself.
But once again, the important thing is that if the objective was achieved (destroying the Manticoran yards and Home Fleet), it doesn't matter if very few ships return. He'd still have 300 SD(P)s undamaged, with his yards intact, while the MA would have lost a significant portion of theirs with no ability to replace in the short-term. The mobile forces would have to be redispositioned to cover the MBS, leaving none to attack the Republic. As a result, we wouldn't have Honor coming to Haven to negotiate with Pritchart, it would have been Theisman coming to Manticore to negotiate with Elizabeth.
I am talking about the chance of something going wrong, 2nd Fleet getting destroyed before 5th Fleet can intervene.
Too small a chance. Tourville (and Giscard before him) could control the initiative and fly exactly where he wanted to. If he found sometheing he couldn't chew, he could withdraw and the assessment was that he had enough firepower to do so.
And if 5th Fleet didn't intervene, then Fifth Fleet leaves undamaged -- one third the ships come home.
If they accomplish their mission the MA wont have the ability to continue the war, but that is a big IF. There are any number of things that can cause someone to lose a battle, things you cant always predict, not leaving yourself a fudge factor if something goes horribly wrong like exiting hyper in the middle of a 150 SD formation trying to test Home Fleet and sneak into the system. Or a new weapon. Or 8th Fleet is on exercise with Home Fleet and the missing IAN SD(P)'s that Theisman was talking about are there as well, suddenly 2nd Fleet goes from facing 50 SD(P)'s with his 240 SD(P)'s to facing 170 SD(P)'s with his 240 SD(P)'s while the alliance has the tech advantage and virtually unlimited supply of pods. My point is that anything can happen so you don't count on those ships to come back until they come back. Just like you don't count/spend you year end bonus in your salary until it gets deposited or don't count benefits that could be revoked without notice towards your budget.
You give them the best chance they have to come home. He did two things: he gave them as many ships as he could, and 2nd Fleet alone was the largest gathering of SDs ever, and he gave them his best CO.
Its not them throwing their forces away, its them entering the system in energy range(Battle of Talbot) of someone who ruins their day. Or they run up against significantly more opposition than they assumed. They can be willing to run if things get too hot, but if the Alliance had done a massive push and got 100 SD(P)'s up an running ahead of schedule and they had veteran crews from the SD's the alliance is decommissioning it could turn a perfectly plan into disaster in minutes.
Even so, 2nd Fleet wouldn't sell themselves short. Even if they ran into the combined forces of Home Fleet, Eighth Fleet, the new construction and the IAN, that adds up to only as many hulls as 2nd Fleet itself. First of all, that is not going to happen. Second, if none of the 2nd Fleet comes home, then at least half of those massed forces don't either. That reduces the MA wall of battle by half in modern hulls, but the RHN wall of battle by only a third in modern hulls. It's a horrible price to pay, but not immediately fatal.
This plan was risky, there's no doubt about it. But the rewards were great.
And the plan was not authorised to be executed until Lovat. We don't know what Pritchart would have ordered if Operation Sanskrit had been done without Apollo.
If they can only achieve a lesser objective of crippling Home Fleet, then the MA must reorganise their OOB, meaning that Eighth Fleet would be unable to sortie. This happened: Eighth Fleet became Home Fleet for months, until the Python Lump entered service. But this wouldn't be decisive: the war would continue.
Not if they end up with only 285 SD(P)'s and with the Python Lump the Alliance ends up with a larger fleet than the RHN.
An unlikely scenario. How would would 336 SD(P)s be lost almost entirely without getting a significant portion of the defenders and/or the infrastructure?
Almost any answer to that question is a reason
why they had to take the risk. If the Python Lump comes out of the yards and the Andermani finally show up for battle, the balance shifts. If there's some technological advance, the balance shifts.
That's why I can see a Hail Mary after Lovat but not so much if the RHN is actually winning. If I was winning I wouldn't gamble on that one battle, if I knew I was screwed within a few months I would send everything and the kitchen sink, I wouldn't worry about defending my territory.
I don't agree it was a Hail Mary Pass before Apollo.
I cant find it right now, but Theisman said to Pritchart that the RHN was able to launch the operation that quickly because they redeployed the fleet before Lovat... you know before 3rd Fleet was crushed in Lovat. I am thinking it wasn't the only force that the RHN had deployed in a similar fashion, I would go ahead and say that maybe there was 2 or 3 more such fleets deployed in different systems to increase the chances of catching 8th Fleet in another Ambush, covering one out of a few dozen systems seems like a losing proposition.
Indeed, the deployment for Beatrice started before Lovat, before Giscard died. But the operation wasn't yet authorised. That means not all ships that eventually were part of Beatrice had yet deployed. So those 2 or 3 other fleets would still be on-station wherever they were.
So if 335 SD(P)'s or even if only 250 SD(P)'s were pre deployed and the RHN had 3-4 fleets like 3rd Fleet deployed around the republic covering some systems then that would mean they had deployed between 150 and 200 SD(P)'s to cover the systems, Capital Fleet, Bolthole Picket and a dozen other tier 1 systems. If the RoH edonomy was devastated by the destruction of Lovat and Lovat was one of the top 20 but not near the top in the republic I would assume there are a few other systems that warrant significant pickets.
I disagree with your number. I'd revise it down to 200 SD(P)s pre-deployed. We know the RHN was at least 620 SD(P)s. Yes, 100 were still working up, but they could be used in support of the other ships when defending their systems, if need be. And they're working up
somewhere so it might as well be where attacks are expect to happen. Let's also say that Capital Fleet and the Bolthole Picket are 150 ships. That leaves 620 - 150 - 200 = 270 ships for Theisman to cover the important systems. That's sufficient in my book.
I would assume that the alliance would scout various systems frequently and randomly, so if they see that the frontline systems are empty of SD(P)'s and the systems 8th Fleet is scouting are empty of SD(P)'s and no reaction forces something bad is going on.
Which is why I said that a portion of the remaining ships would be used to trick the Eighth Fleet scouts. And you don't make it easy for the scouts to know where you are (and thus where you're not). I don't expect the scouts could actually see more than a single SD(P) squadron in any system they scouted. The rest would be in stealth in distant parts of the system. Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.