cthia wrote:Thanks for clearing up my misnomer about the hierarchy. Even so, the Chief of Staff—according to Honor—does all the work. She/he gets run ragged. According to Honor, I can certainly see why that position would need a righthand man too. But if much of their responsibility is offloaded to an incompetent, the system will break down. Intelligence failures will be the result. The Second Space Lord will undoubtedly assume the blame, but that isn't going to erase the failure.
There's a change of quality when it shifts from person to person. Sure, an incompetent upper level will just pass on everything unchanged to the lower levels and take all the credit for the work. We don't know this was the case because we don't know who the Second Space Lord was and who his/her Chief of Staff was.
Usually, the principal makes the decisions, the Chief of Staff dispatches the work to the staffers and the Deputy Chief of Staff ... makes notes? sends email reminding the staffers of their deliverables? keeps the spreadsheet with the assignments and the Gantt charts? I don't know, it's not clear what a Deputy is supposed to do. Is it the same responsibilities as a spare tire?
I still can't agree his position was harmless. A system is only as good as its weakest link.
A chain is as strong as its weakest link because all links in the chain feel the same force/pressure. A complex system is not a chain: there are multiple levels of redundancy to catch mistakes.
Take the case of Principal, Chief of Staff, Deputy Chief of Staff. Any two of the three can be incompetent and the work can still get done. This reminds me of the old Hanna-Barbera cartoon of Hong Kong Phooey, who was a really incompetent Principal, but had a very good Deputy (Spot). Dick Dastardly is another: if Mutley weren't there to (literally!) pick up the pieces, he'd never leave the start line in the first place. Though if Mutley didn't enable his strategems in the first place, maybe he'd actually have to compete with his actual driving skills and good car, which score him a few victories. Huh... need to think more about this.
I'm not claiming the quality of the work would be the same. If the Second Space Lord and the Chief of Staff were incompetent, there's only so much the Deputy can do, not having the same access to people and information. But a really good Deputy could keep appearances for some time.
Either way, I don't think Janacek was incompetent at all. The fact that he saw Lt. Winton's article and took the time to write a reply (or at least have it written) points to someone highly secure on his shoes.
I agree, benching Givens certainly was meant to serve his political goals, but it wasn't meant to serve his country. Wait, strike that, I'm having my present government's dilemma bleed over into this argument. Givens was a godsend. If it ain't broke, don't fix it. Jurgensen wasn't just corrupt, he was incompetent too!
In Jurgensen's case, I agree. If nothing else, he was unable to support the party line for long enough, when the inconvenient facts kept coming. A government is in big trouble when it starts to believe its own lies: it's one thing to have propaganda keep the population quiet, it's quite another to let the propaganda dictate State actions. High Ridge's government believed its own lies and that was Jurgensen's fault. A counter-example is the pre-coup PRH: the Legislaturalists knew exactly what their failings were and what the actual state of the economy was.
cthia wrote:The writing on the wall I'm referring to is his failure to see that Honor was right to do what she did, and why she had to do it. He failed to see the implication of Basilisk by renouncing her actions and piling it on her "hothead" syndrome! It was all down hill from there in his head.
In the end, he agreed with Hamish and my opinion of himself that he had quite a few screws loose. He tried to correct that flaw by blowing the screws out. That put paid to the question of his "intelligence." Suicide is never intelligent, barring extreme physical pain. I suppose his emotional pain over his complete failures and ignorance can be accepted.
He interpreted the facts according to his own biased background, as do everyone. And to be honest, his actions were right after OBS: the SKM wasn't ready for a war. The extra 4 years of uneasy peace helped the SKM tremendously. In fact, even more time would have helped, since the SKM was opening up a lead on the PRH in terms of both quality and quantity of hulls. And in those 4 years, the Manticoran Alliance grew further especially by the Grayson inclusion.
And in any case, he didn't completely disavow her. A disavowed captain doesn't get two jumps in rank and a brand, new heavy cruiser command. I'll grant you he didn't have a choice here, not when Her Majesty stepped in and started piling Monarch's Thanks and other awards on her. Maybe if he'd had a choice, he would have benched her or even dismissed her from service, but this is why a system is not a chain-link: even the First Space Lord's opinion isn't sufficient to derail the entire system.