Jonathan_S wrote:Theemile wrote:Actually, placing a underpowered picket at a key location is a valid military strategy. It was seen all the time in the 1st war were a 3rd tier system was picketed by as pair of Wallers or a squadron of BCs. Yes, the day to day work was done by a handful of DD-CAs, but why assign the big ships?
A Pair of wallers is just a light deterrent, right? a squadron can push them out of the system. Yes, but you need a squadron to do so, one or two - or even 3 might be lost if the cards don't go your way. send 4, you might still lose, or severely damage 2 or 3 ships, putting them out of the fight. No, a deterrent force of 2 ships forces you to go into the system in Squadron+ force to ensure light losses. And those ships have to be pulled from somewhere else weakening them there.
That was a deployment policy forced on the Admiralty by domestic RMN politics. It was definitely not because it was a good military strategy.
Yes, a pair of wallers means the attacker needs to bring along wallers of their own if they want to punch out the system defenses. (Though with only two, and given their low acceleration in the early war, a raiding force of CAs or BCs still has a decent chance of avoiding the pair of SDs and tearing up in-system traffic or even some infrastructure and then escaping).
But its easier for the Peeps to peel off enough wallers to utterly overwhelm a detached pair than it is do do the same against an entire 8-ship squadron (this being before the RMN's SD squadron size was reduced from 8 to 6 ships). So if the Peeps were aware of all these isolated pairs of SDs they could take 2-3 squadrons and sequentially hit several systems with these pairs before the RMN could disseminate the news and react. Even with towed pods RMN wallers weren't going to do well against an 4 (or 6) to 1 odds. So potentially the Peeps could knock out a couple squadrons worth of RMN SDs using just a couple squadrons of their own -- because the firepower (and defensive fire) overmatch in each fight allows the Peeps to defeat those RMN units in detail; when that sized Peep force would have lost a straight up fight against all those RMN units had they been concentrated.
Arguably, those pickets weren't underpowered for what they may have been intended to prevent: battleship raiders from the PRH, which the RMN apparently really liked to use ex-PN ships for, possibly as a result of Fourth Yeltsin.
Several Havenite ships of the wall were taken into service during the early war, including five dreadnoughts during the First Battle of Hancock. None of these ships saw frontline service, but four of them spent some time as rear area security operating with captured Havenite superdreadnoughts.
And...
Along with the handful of captured dreadnoughts and smaller classes, these ships provided rear area security for a number of Alliance systems during the early stages of the war, but were relegated to mothballs as their crews were needed to man the new construction, while the ships in best condition were all sold at scrap value to Grayson in early 1917.
And...
Similar to the Duquesnes, the few more modern Haven-class superdreadnoughts captured in the early days of the war served for several years as rear area security, freeing up hulls for the front. None of them saw battle against their sisters still in Havenite service however, and the last were sold to Grayson along with the Duquesnes.
Rear area security is mentioned frequently. Either this practice was extremely successful at deterring battleship attacks or it simply failed to bait the PRH into attacking those kind of systems in strength(until Operation Icarus, anyway).