
Interesting.
I think fester is positing the IAN should have thrown those 80 Wallers they could spare in with the RMN in 1905. If so, he may be correct. The war with Haven may have been resolved before Bolthole became as much of a factor—if I'm correct about the timeline of the ultimate advantage in hulls Bolthole provided to the ProH's wall of battle. The RMN certainly could have used those wallers because they had had a hard time holding on to the initiative, throughout the war. Remember when Eighth Fleet's talents were wasted on peripheral systems and overall being a nuisance? Would the IAN have remained in the war for the long haul had it come to that?
At any rate, I'm not sure whatever government at the helm in the MBS would have taken appropriate advantage of the additional wallers and went for the jugular.
The memo is especially interesting to me because it supplies some broth to The |absolue| value of captured enemy systems. Although I'm hard pressed to recall the RMN grabbing real estate deep in Peep territory??? It stands to reason that Haven should not have been able to hold on to Seaford-9.
We already discussed somewhere that the RMN once had to catch up to the IAN. Therefore, it is accurate where this memo places the respective Navies on the scale. It isn't unfathomable that the IAN still felt it applied.