tlb wrote:It is hard to reconcile what you say Parliament should do, with what it actually did. If the Lords were that reasonable, then the High Ridge coalition would have failed; but that is not what happened. High Ridge and his political allies stood firm then and there is no reason to assume that they would not stand firm under this situation as well.
I hope that you do not think that there would be a mutiny? I say that he could and would close the Junction to any attempt to break the ceasefire, simply because the internal politics of Manticore are more important to him and his coalition members than the feelings of the allies, which also include Erewhon (not just Grayson).
I think there's a good chance he would have had to act differently when it came to the Andermani, compared to what he did to the Graysons and other minor allies. It's doubtful the GSN could have finished the war alone, without Manticoran financial, intelligence, and naval help. By the end of the first war, the RMN had something like 5x as many wallers than the GSN and were still supplying a sizeable percentage of their officers.
But if you throw the IAN into the equation, especially with fester's argument that they could add 80 wallers free from defensive posture, it changes completely. Now the GSN and IAN can finish the war, whether the RMN is there to help or not. For High Ridge to be able to continue the war-time taxation, he'd have to actually hinder the allies, not just stop helping. This is what I'm asserting would be enough to get him booted out of government.
His alliance in the Lords was composed of parties with little common interest. It was only his war-time supply of money that kept a lot of his on Conservative Association in line. But there's a big difference between turning a blind eye to a situation that "is resolved" and turning against an ally. One that shares a terminus with the Junction and can attack another easily (Basilisk). That would be creating a new enemy before the current one is resolved. H&H would have a field day, nay, week at the Lords dissecting just how bad this idea would be. And my argument is that it would be sufficient to topple his government.
More so because, at this juncture, he hasn't yet disbursed the war-time taxation income to his allies. All that grafting is still theoretical, in the future.