kzt wrote:We know the files were not encrypted because the RMN read them. If they were encrypted and nobody on the ship had the keys then they wouldn’t be reading them.
You don’t hide plans for emergencies. You practice them so everyone knows what to do.
It’s like Sully over the Hudson getting a message from the airplane: “The birdstrike requires the use of the the emergency engine out manual. Please unlock the safe, remove the manual from it’s sealed envelope labeled HJ43, read pages 2-27 and follow the checklist on page A37.”
How is that gonna work?
Exactly! You took the words right out of my mouth.
This is also a good example of my niece's distinction between strategy and tactics.
Strategy is formulated in the War Room. If that strategy is to be used as a tactic in the heat of battle, it has to be known beforehand. When the Salamander is bearing down on you, you don't have time to break glass. It and the bulk heads are already breaking around you.
Which brings us right back to the question. If there were conscientious officers who were not willing to carry out those orders under some specific conditions, then why did they not report it?
Even if only from the paralyzing fear that some other ignoramus would.