Sigs wrote:The RHN has ~330 SD(P)'s at the start of the war counting the 10 they lost at Marsh. They also have 200 SD's in active service, at the beginning of the war I don't know if the RMN can distinguish between which one is an SD(P) and which one is an SD just through sensors.
They can. This depends on range, of course, but they can easily tell a DuQuesne-class SD from an unknown class. They won't know initially that the unknown, bigger ships (the Sovereigns of Space) are SD(P)s, but they'll know which ones aren't. The range matters, but if you consider that the inner system will be swarming with RDs way before the fleets make contact, there's a good chance they can tell that half the force is of targets-only ships before engagement.
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No matter how it started, as long as Haven is negotiating in good faith, doesn't start making insane demands, and gives back Trevor's Star to the SKM I can see a long lasting peace coming out of it. True the RMN would be crushed as a force, but they will rebuild with the ships in Grednelsbane and the Home system which Haven wont destroy, so they can be back to 120 SD(P)'s in service and the GSN can be back up to 115 SD(P)'s in service in 24 months as well. I don't see the MA going for a revenge war if the peace treaty is fair to both sides and San Martin is returned.
I agree with that, I just don't think it'll get to that in the first place.
If the RHN massed all its 315 SD(P)s for a surprise attack on the MBS, it might succeed. It has a chance of defeating Home Fleet and 3rd Fleet in detail, like Beatrice later planned to do (and did). Dividing the Havenite forces to attack both the Home Fleet and Third Fleet dilutes the Havenite strength and invites its own defeat in detail, at the expense of Trevor's Star.
Sigs wrote:The primary front is to keep pressure on the alliance so they don't end up freeing ships from Grayson, Manticore and Trevor's Star because the RHN ends up focusing exclusively on defence. The MA wont expose Manticore, Grayson or Trevor's Star but the RHN has to exert pressure on them by having major fleets near Manticore/Grayson and Trevor's Star. Just because they wont fully expose those systems doesn't mean they wont strip ships from them for an operation or two.
For a Hail Mary, I agree. But for anything short of that, stripping the systems bare or practically bare is recklessness. I'm not saying skimming a division or two, but completely stripping. You don't know if an enemy fleet is in position to attack.
I realise this is what you're saying: that Haven needed to maintain some fleets in position to threaten those systems in case they were stripped. But I counter that by saying Haven didn't need to have the fleets in position, only to create reasonable doubt that the fleets could be in position. The MA intelligence can't know for certain that all the 620 SD(P)s are beyond a month's travel from Manticore.
There's also the delay time. Even if all the MA scouts managed to pinpoint 600 SD(P)s, the travel time from those scouts to Trevor's Star is two or three weeks. The reinforced Eighth Fleet would take another four to six weeks to attack its target and get back, releasing the Home Fleet ships back. That's anywhere between 4 to 9 weeks those ships weren't defending the home system, which is more than enough time for the ships that were pinpointed to leave on an attack operation.
And it's worse for Grayson, because you need to add a week or two each way from Trevor's Star to Yeltsin's Star for the DB to call in the ships and for them to get there.
Main front and secondary front are NOT a primarily defensive entities, they primary goal is to tie down the MA's limited ships simply by their close proximity to the MA's main systems. The fleets would be a fleet in being, they cant individually attack Manticore or Grayson but neither can the MA clear them out without exposing one or more of their critical systems.
And even then you don't need a lot of ships. Two or three dozen SD(P)s are more than enough of a menace to keep the Home Fleets where they are, especially when you don't know when they could be suddenly reinforced.
That's also how the RoH shows restraint, they put 150 SD(P)'s in 3 Fleets near the MA's core systems knowing that the MA cant organize a fleet to overwhelm 1 let alone all three of those systems and they cant afford to weaken any of their defences, [...]
There's absolutely no way that Haven had three 150 SD(P) fleets in close proximity to Manticore and/or Trevor's Star, for the simple reason that if they did, Theisman wouldn't have needed to ask permission to start preparations for Beatrice. Those ships would be the preparation. And he wouldn't have attacked with 335 ships, but with 450.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but an ambush fleet covers a specific secondary system, waits in the vicinity of that specific system for the right conditions to execute the ambush, how does it protect a core system if it is a few days to a week away from getting to that system? By the time the system commander sends a request for help, that request gets to the ambush fleet, and that fleet gets to the system in question 8th Fleet would have trashed the systems infrastructure, destroyed the picket and would have been long gone by the time anyone showed up.
Terminology issue here. I'm using secondary and core systems interchangeably here to mean systems like Solon and Lovat, though "core" encompasses both secondary and primary. Primary would be Haven, Bolthole and at most one or two more.
So the ambush fleets don't need to travel. They are already in position. With 500 SD(P)s available, you put 100 in Haven, 100 more in Bolthole, 50 in each of the other two primary systems, you have 200 left for ambush fleets. Giscard's fleet was 4 squadrons strong, or 32 ships only. In that math, you could have 6 different ambush fleets, with enough left overs for decoys. Ditto for four 6-squadron fleets.
And I didn't include any of the older SDs nor the working-up SD(P)s. Those aren't good enough for an attack in the MBS, but they can serve as decoys while they work up and do serve as deterrents.
Or they can go to the inner system which is now apparently undefended and force Grayson to surrender.
The GSN Home Fleet and their ~50-60 SD(P)'s have to protect the industry AND the inner system, this means they have to split in two. Deploying everything to protect one, exposes the other. In your scenario deploying all of Home Fleet to cover Blackbird exposes the inner system and farms that the Protectorate still depends on, so it would be race against time as to who gets to Grayson first, and if the RHN gets there first the GSN is screwed since I doubt they will fire salvos at the RHN if Grayson is backdrop for fear of committing an EE violation against their own people.
More Likely scenario is that the GSN Home Fleet is larger than Manticore's Home Fleet because they have to protect two very important objectives, in Manticore they could temporarily abandon Gryphon without losing all of their industrial capabilities. So the Junction is covered by the forts and Manticore A is covered by Home Fleet with Gryphon getting a lighter task force and fixed defences.
Ok, that's a good point, the Grayson Home Fleet needs to be split between Uriel and the inner system, as neither can be left uncovered. The thing is that each is in position to mutually support the other: should a force drop in on Uriel, a chunk of the inner system force is split off and pins the attacker between two forces. Similarly for someone dropping in the inner system. And if the attacker divides between both, then the ratio is closer to balance.
Plus Blackbird is a military target already, it wouldn't hesitate to use system defence pods, unlike the RMN did during the Battle of Manticore. Fixed defences, like you said.
So they exposed their nation, tied down 40+% of their SD(P)'s on a contingency they had no intention of launching and all of that was done at the time they needed a victory against 8th Fleet to execute Camille. At the very time they needed to increase the odds of catching 8th Fleet they took away a large portion of the SD(P)'s for a contingency.
I disagree on exposing the nation and tying down. Arguments above.
Eighth Fleet had been defeated by 4 squadrons. If they manage to defeat it again with something similar, they'd execute Camille. If Eighth Fleet had been substantially reinforced (which we have to assume they also assumed, so they wouldn't have deployed the exact same ambush force level), they'd go for a stronger response. Which I repeat does not mean Beatrice.
And still, this is the very time they have to do it. If the attack is so strong that they have no choice but to launch Beatrice, that also means they have no time to lose. Having to assemble those forces and train them means you could miss your last chance to win the war.
Beatrice wouldn't take that long if it was an emergency, because if it was an emergency I wouldn't bother training the fleet up, I would gather every ship between Haven and Manticore that I can get go with the time I have till I get to Manticore.
Agreed, which is why it wasn't an emergency. It was a contingency.
Wait, so your theory is to basicly show the MA where your ambush fleets are by sending them in and out of the system a few at a time? I'm sure no one will wonder why the system received 50 SD(P)'s as reinforcement over the last month or two and lost 50 SD(P)'s in reinforcement over the last months or two. The whole point of the RHN's ambush fleets were so that NO ONE in the MA knew they were at the target systems until its too late. Missing 300 SD(P)'s in 6 ambush fleets is significantly better than giving the MA a list of target systems to avoid because they obviously have SD(P)'s near by.
No, that's not what I am saying. I am saying confuse the RDs that should be there, not show your hand. This is just a clever sleight of hand: show a squadron here, a squadron there, to keep ONI from knowing where the full force is. As I said in another post, send some empty fleet trains to the middle of nowhere, pretend to unload, then come back. That way, you can hide the actual fleet trains in the uncertainty. The point is to make ONI believe more systems had ambush forces than there actually were or, alternatively, from knowing which ones did have and which ones didn't.
My point is that those ambush forces have to be out there, hiding, but they can't survive indefinitely without resupply or refit. It's those missions that allow ONI to know where a force is or isn't.
If the scouts had caught wind of even 6 SD(P)'s in system along with CLAC's I doubt 8th Fleet would have visited Solon. The Whole point of an ambush is for the enemy to walk in without expecting you there, because if they know you have an ambush fleet in the system they will either avoid it or find a way to ambush the ambush fleet like they did in Lovat. They could have done that without Apollo if they were willing to take some risks.
I disagree, for two reasons. One, Eighth Fleet can take on 6 SD(P)s and a few CLACs. Second, there are probably several systems with that force-level visible, which means Eighth Fleet would have no targets it sees no defenders at all. It has to choose one to attack. The real trick here is how you choose: how do you determine that those 6 SD(P)s are all that the system has to defend and haven't been reinforced in the two months since the scout last visited the system?
As long as there were enough Ambush fleets to increase the chance of catching 8th Fleet in one, and the enemy(MA) didn't know where they are. If the RHN had 5 Ambush Fleets and their 240 SD(P)'s and 60 CLAC's and then they took aside 240 SD(P)'s and 16 CLAC's for a contingency operation they didn't plan on executing that leaves 40 SD(P)'s fully operational for defence of the republic and 100 SD(P)'s working up. Don't know about you but I doubt the MA will miss that 92%+ of the RHN's SD(P) have suddenly gone missing and Capital Fleet can be knocked off by 40 Alliance SD(P)'s. So either the ambush fleets were reduced in number to a point where the RHN would have been exceptionally lucky to catch 8th Fleet and 8th Fleet would have had to be exceptionally unlucky to step inside a trap or they stripped every important objective and set themselves up for failure.
Yes, I would. The whole point of an
ambush fleet is to remain hidden. So the fact that the MA can't find the ships doesn't mean they aren't there. They could be elsewhere.
I'm arguing that working up to Beatrice and preparing ambush fleets are not mutually exclusive options. But even if they are, Eighth Fleet's target list
was shrinking, since they were going for bigger and more important targets every time. Turning around and trashing a tertiary system doesn't help the war effort -- does, in fact, hinder it, because it cedes the initiative. So Sanskrit would launch an attack on a system that was at least on the same level as Solon, with a higher likelihood for those more important.
The meeting happened in April 1921, the plan for Beatrice was probably for at least June-Sept 1921, so he was talking about ships they would have AT THE TIME of the planned attack not at the time of the conversation. I would hope that the CNO knows exactly when he would get ships, how long it takes to work them up and when he expects them to be operational. If he doesn't he is a shitty CNO.
So you're saying that the RHN added 400 ships between March and June 1921? And they didn't need working up?