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).
Erls wrote:This is actually pretty easy to reconcile.
Let's go back to WWII, after the Atomic Bombs but before the Japanese surrendered. If, at that time, the Phillipines or Chinese had demanded that we keep going until Japan is invaded and conquered (or every city destroyed), it would have been pretty easy Truman and the Senate to shrug and accept the surrender. IF, however, a combination of Britain, France, Canada, and the Soviet Union had all demanded that Japan be invaded and conquered (or every city destroyed), it would have been a lot tougher call to make.
And then take it a step further, instead of an unconditional surrender Japan instead had sought a ceasefire to negotiate final terms. Had this happened, with Washington's largest allies demanding the war continue until complete victory, I don't see how Truman doesn't keep dropping bombs until complete victory.
The point is that it is really easy to tell Grayson at the end of the first war to pound sand. It would have been a lot tougher to tell that to the Andermani, especially if the Andermani had gotten Manty tech.
I think the likely outcome of that is that High Ridge would be able to stall for a year - tops - while Janacek (slowly) resupplies 8th Fleet and makes sure everyone gets a couple months of shore leave. At that point, if the Andermani are still demanding that the job gets finished High Ridge would have had to allowed the Andermani (and Grayson) free use of the junction at the very least. More likely he would have ended up negotiating to put one of his cronies in overall command of a fleet that was 1/3rd or less Manty. At least here he could stretch out the war-time taxes and other programs for every possible day.
In the case of WW2, the major allies had already agreed that nothing less than unconditional surrender would be accepted. After the difficult and bloody invasion of Okinawa, Truman authorized the use of atomic bombs as preferable to invasion of the main Japanese home islands. If the other allies had demanded an invasion, they would have had to contribute a substantial percentage of the landing forces, a more likely outcome would have been the construction and use of more atomic bombs.
Now could Truman have accepted less than the full unconditional surrender? Actually it is possible, but it is unlikely to be presented that way. A hand shake and an under the table deal could have done things like preserving the rule of the Emperor when MacArthur administered Japan, for instance.
I do not see how much harder it would be for High Ridge to tell the Andermani what they told the other allies in the book. Unless you think the Andermani would actually fight Manticore for the opportunity to conquer Haven. I think the Andermani are too realistic to do that and expect they would withdraw from the Alliance and work on implementing the new technology in their fleet. After the fall of High Ridge they would be much more demanding in Silesia than they were in the book.