Sigs wrote:D’Orville would be busy shooting at and being shot at by the lead fleet to worry about a trailing fleet and Kuzak and Honor would be busy getting shot at by the Trailing Fleet and 5th Fleet to worry about the point TF.
The trailing fleet, consisting of older SDs, would not be firing at Third or Eighth Fleets since they wouldn't be carrying MDMs in the first place. Even if they fired from tractored pods, Kuzak and Honor would know those are older ships and of a lesser threat than the one full of modern SD(P)s hammering Home Fleet.
Most of the navy has been fighting for the last 15 years, they should be competent enough in an emergency to be able to fight without putting their fellow ships in danger.
Agreed, which is why I don't like this explanation.
2) the ships' presence would be a net negative contribution; even more battle-drilled SD(P)s could be in this category, if the C&C networks become saturated (think "Mythical Man Month");
When you are desperate, a ship is a ship.
Not if it is a negative ship. Do you know what I am talking about when I refer to "Mythical Man Month"? If not, see the
Wikipedia article. The summary is that adding more resources to a project can make it worse than not doing so.
But again, I don't like this explanation. I just had to be thorough.
By the looks of it, the RMN was oddly surprised and shocked that they were attacked, I don’t think another month would have changed much if they were so far gone to not anticipate Beatrice after Lovat.
See other reply. Summary: that's not a chance Theisman can take.
Here's another explanation: the Octagon decided that Giscard was really good in defence, having just blunted the attack in Solon, so they swap roles compared to what Theisman told Pritchart. Giscard stays for the defence and Tourville is sent to take command of Second Fleet.
I believe Tourville and Giscard would have both been to Beatrice, two major fleets on the biggest operation of the war, I would send the best commander I have to command both fleets.
Why are you rejecting a simple explanation that would explain why the ships you said had to be away could be away with their CO?
Someone had to stay behind to parry Eighth Fleet incursions. At this point, Beatrice isn't launched, it's just a pre-deployment for a contingency. Defending against Eighth Fleet is more important. Given Giscard had done defending at Solon and was in Lovat doing the same, it's a reasonable conclusion that he was kept on that role.
Probably 80-90% of the RHN was on the way to Manticore. Sending DB’s to all systems with ships concentrations with orders to leave NLT 48h from receipt of the message and meet in system x should get everyone within a week of each other. So it might delay the operation by a few days, to a week but it would be worth it.
It wasn't. In everyone's calculation (including yours), no more than 50% of the fleet was being prepared to go for Manticore. So when the news came to Haven of what had happened in Lovat, the other half of the fleet (or majority, in your calculations) wouldn't have any orders to move towards Manticore.
Your calculations of "within a week of each other" is simply inaccurate. Haven space was at least 4 weeks' travel, end-to-end, probably wider. Though I'll grant you that the majority of the forces that would make a difference would be within a week of Haven. With one important exception: Bolthole. The J-156-18(L) system (the local end of the wormhole leading to Bolthole).
Dark Fall wrote:J-156-18(L) was seventy-two light-years from the Haven System, which meant ninety percent of the People’s Republic was closer to Trevor’s Star than to the PRH’s end of the new bridge.
At 3000 times c pseudovelocity, ignoring accelerations and transit, that's nearly 9 days' travel. And the Calvin System was again 10 light-years away from Bolthole, so add another day and a half. That's 10 days each way and that's only getting them as far back as Haven. Forces from Bolthole would arrive at the rally point from 12 to 20 days after the DB that contained the orders from Haven would, assuming they left immediately upon the courier's arrival with the movement orders.
So could Haven afford a 3-week delay? That's the question.
I suppose I have to explain how this shouldn’t matter. If I am the First Space Lord, before launching an operation like the one in Lovat I would sit down with my brain trust and ask them some questions, if you were the RHN what would see as your options after Lovat. How would you view the situation after the revelation of the new technology?
What I should get as an answer from most of them:
1) No change. The RHN believes it was a trick/fluke etc… therefore they don’t do any major changes to their operations tempo and plans.
2) Surrender. They see this as a game changer and give up instantly.
3) Do a winner take all operation to end the war quickly. They have seen that their numerical advantage has evaporated and its only a matter of time before the MA sends 8th Fleet with 50-60 SD(P)’s with Keyhole and Apollo to capture Haven.
Since Theisman is intelligent and the RHN as whole seem to be competent and capable number one should be scratched out immediately. Number two is more likely but still the Battle of Lovat demonstrated that the MA does not have Keyhole and Apollo in great numbers so there is still a chance for victory. This leaves number 3, and that should be the obvious conclusion. You don’t just launch an operation like Sanskrit without thinking of the consequences for the enemy and how they can/will react to it. The RHN went from comfortable superiority in ships and the ability to dictate to a degree the direction of the war to having a few months before an entire Fleet of keyhole and Apollo SD(P)’s come out of the yards.
I have to the "What's wrong with AAC" thread for the discussion on this. I agree with you but the Admiralty didn't.
The Allied SD(P) strength post BoM should be around 240-260 SD(P)’s total. The RHN SD(P) strength should be 269 SD(P)’s. The Allied SD(P)’s were ~30% more capable than their RHN opponents. The RHN had ~300 SD’s in service post BoM while the Allied SD(P)’s would be equivalent to 325 RHN SD(P)’s if we took the middle ground and assumed that 250 Remain. Now, if no power in the universe could prevent the RHN’s remaining SD(P)’s from rolling over Manticore HS what the hell are the fixed defences and the 250 MA SD(P)’s going to do?
The Allied SD(P) strength was about 200 RMN+GSN ships before BoM, but about 100 of those were destroyed. So the Allied strength is 100 + IAN. Theisman estimated between a hundred and a hundred and twenty, but we know that only 40 were coming out of the yards after the Emperor had them change schedules so some ships were able to finish the Keyhole II refit. So your estimate is a little high.
[...] post BoM I would be recalling every SD(P) from the minor allies, rushing every refit and redeploying SD(P)’s from New Berlin and Grayson to rebuild a fleet to defend Manticore and Trevor’s Star.
Even then I don't think this strengthens Home Fleet under Honor beyond 60 SD(P)s, probably less, with all additions being older Medusa-class SD(P)s. The mothballed SDs can't be returned to duty quickly and enough and in any case there are no crews for them. The only salvation for Home Fleet is the Python Lump, which we do know is coming in a couple of months (and maybe could be expedited) but again you run into the problem of having crews for them. At best you can do a 1:1 swap of a Medusa for an Invictus, but you still have to mothball the older ship.
We can probably assume that the Python Lump was expedited. We know it launched in October or November.
So for the foreseeable future, the defences at Manticore would have to be those 60 plus whatever the IAN would spare of their 40. Even if we assume all 40, that's about 100 SD(P), against a minimum of 300 RHN equivalents.