cthia wrote:If Haven had successfully seduced Grayson, that may have been a start.
tlb wrote:After recently rereading HotQ, it does not appear that Haven ever had a chance to do that. Manticore was closer, had better stuff and could be depended to not take over; so Haven had to go for the Zealots instead.
cthia wrote:We, I, know only after the fact that they didn't have a chance. As I remember it though, the author had ME on pins and needles about it. IINM, Grayson's main worry was whether the SK could hold out against the much larger Haven itself. And if they can't, Grayson would be next out of spite, if nothing else, and things would be much harder. The main point was that since Haven was in the running at all made it anything but an open and shut case. IMO. Perhaps 72% SK?
You just had a reread, am I right?
Yeltsin and Endicott were in the direct path between Haven and Manticore; so the Grayson worry was not whether Manticore could hold out, it was whether Haven would capture Grayson as a prelude to the main attack. A battle at Yeltsin was one of the two opening campaigns of the war. Grayson chose the only option that had a chance of preventing a takeover by Haven.