penny wrote:You are playing a game of chess against Honor. She is the most powerful piece on the board. Her side and your side. How many of your Rooks, Knights, Bishops and pawns are you going to send after her? You sure aren't going to let her saunter by if you corner her in a dark alley in space. If you leave her on the board, don't hope to win.
Good question. How many?
Let's say you don't have a queen because you don't have an equivalent. Is a queen worth all of your bishops, rooks and knights combined?
That's the type of exchange ratio I am talking about.
In case it still isn't clear. The order to assassinate Honor should be At All Costs! Which means that my mileage does indeed vary and it is as follows...
No, it should not. Is assassinating Honor worth exposing the location of Darius?
1. Honor is an Alpha! If anyone is going to appreciate that, it is the MAlign.
Though they say she is, that is disputed.
2. The GA only has one Alpha at its 'disposal.' Malign Providence. That takes a lot of complexity out of the equation.
For the same reason that it's disputed she's an Alpha, many others in the one hundred billion living currently in the GA systems could fall under the same classification. Some with better genetic history than she.
3. Honor is the best tactician and strategist to send to Darius.
4.
5.
6.
No dispute on those.
However, the fact that she's the best officer to take the MAlign down does not mean she's the only who can. There is no one other officer who is her equal, but if you put Henke, Theisman and Tourville together, they could. One learned directly from her, one fighting her, and the other is the only officer who's successfully beaten her.
More importantly, the exchange ratio: taking Honor off the board is not worth weakening your own forces so much that a slightly-above-average SLN officer could win. You don't want to have to surrender to Kingsford, do you?
7. The Salamander is the only officer that will guarantee the exchange rate is in the GA's favor.
There I dispute. There are many very competent officers who could still prevail against the MAlign.
At a minimum, remember that the original plotline was that she would have died and someone else would lead the charge against the MAlign. And no, I'm not saying it's Raoul Alexander-Harrington; it isn't clear if the timeline would have progressed that far for him to have become supreme forces commander.
In fact, there's a very good chance that this will still come to pass: Honor will be retired by the climatic battle and won't participate in it.
So, remove her from the board! A S A P. If not sooner. Maybe even as a sucker punch to begin the war. That is a good first opening chess move.
Tactic: reveal to the Galaxy that the MAlign still exists, by throwing all five currently existing LD-class ships at the MBS. In the process, Honor dies, but all five ships are destroyed too. But not totally... the databases of one of them survive, which include the galactic coordinates of Darius. The enlisted / conscripted personnel also do and they provide even more intel.
The GA peoples are so incensed with the loss of The Salamander that they demand the GF reform and take action immediately. They dispatch 400 SD(P)s and CLACs that drop on Darius that is completely unprepared for such an assault, because the next batch of LDs is still barely in construction and their hulls are yet to be even pressurised, and all resources had been diverted to the first five that there aren't even any other defences around Gamma besides a few old forts of the same type that existed on Galton.
Darius ends.
I don't think that's a good story.
Why do you keep talking about 20 crews? An LD is powerful enough to take out an SD by itself if its stealth is as formidable as I think it is. Contrary to what you may think, the LD will not be a pussy. It is a spider. Not a cat.
Because that's the discussion we were having: attacking a fleet and taking out all of its capital ships. At some point in the discussion, it became sending one LD to take out one capital ship.
Yes, they do see life as expendable, which means they will not hesitate for one malignant second to assassinate Honor ... By hook, by crook, by Peep, by Solarian, by Manticoran, by Grayson, by Andermanian, by spook, by spy or by LD.
They see life as expendable, but not a free resource. There's a value associated with each, albeit low.
And in the equation, I doubt one Honor is worth 10,000 capable MAN personnel
intentionally on a suicide mission, much less 200,000.
But Honor will never be fully retired until Darius is found. But you have a point, she can also be killed while she is going ack and forth with a shuttle to Imperator.
Which is a far more plausible scenario for having the LD approach the battle fleet in the first place, instead of sending a g-torp.
An opponent cannot apply brute force while he is the one being su ker punched. Brute force is being applied to you!
There's such a thing as brute force defence, like having so many layers of it that the enemy can't get through.
It also doesn't lead to reckless strategy or tactics either. The decision to assassinate is strategic. You don't fail to put your worst enemy on your eliminate list. And you don't suddenly embrace reckless tactics to ignore an opportunity to do so. You're a spider for goodness sakes, and her [i Imperator [/i] has flown right I to your web. So what she's surrounded by a lot of other flies. You only want that one.
All this is saying is that taking Honor's ship out is an opportunity to be seized, not a mission to be planned. A planned mission would deploy stand-off range stealth weapons.
But I don't see an LD loitering around a battle fleet, even in peace time, for more than a few minutes. The danger of being found out increases with time, giving the whole ballgame away. Therefore, I don't see the scenario where the LD could shoot at Honor's ship even being possible.
Thinksmarkedly wrote:Let's rewind this scenario a half hour: the LD is being corralled into a kill basket and its CO stupidly allowed him/herself to be put in this position instead of aborting. And also did not swim out the torpedoes earlier. Those torpedoes can keep pace with the ship and have sufficient power supply, so they should have been deployed before as a contingency. So this incompetent CO knows he's dead or captured and thus decides to "Alamo" again.
Woe! Woe! Woe! You have incorrectly analyzed the situation. The LD isn't being corralled into anything. The LD is doing the corralling. The quiet stealthy spider is the one spin ing the web. You can't corral something you can't see and you don't know is even there.
What the LD's CO intended to do is irrelevant: what matters is that he failed and found himself corralled into a kill basket from which he could not escape. That's the only reason he'd be found so close to enemy ships without torpedoes ready.
That's the description of the situation we had: the LD can't do anything but shoot its own weapons now, which definitely gives away its position. The moment it does, it signals to everyone else within 50 million km where to send missiles. So it dies.
My argument for rewinding the scenario is that this CO would have had ample opportunity to deploy torpedoes and escape with his ship intact earlier on. There's no reason why they would find themselves so close to enemy ships in the first place, if the torpedoes are that capable.
Thinksmarkedly wrote:Since ships decelerate by flipping over and going ass-backwards, that means they spend roughly 50% of the time with each aspect pointed in the direction of travel.
And 50% not.
My point was that the equipment is equally capable on both ends because each is used 50% of the time. When a ship is decelerating, it's scanning ahead of it for what's to come and because of human nature, and what's behind it because now something can overtake it. When it's accelerating away, it's scanning ahead of itself for the same reasons. Maybe then they aren't looking behind, as it is difficult to generate an intercept.
And because it's difficult to generate an intercept, it's definitely difficult for an spider asset to do so. The only thing they could do is use Honor's own tactics at Cerberus and cross the flight path laterally.
A variant of this could work. In fact, currently, this is the only tactic I see making sense using spiders against non-stationary targets. And then only in peace time.
But with torpedoes, not with the LDs themselves. Since the torpedoes have the same acceleration and endurance of the LD, there's no advantage in sending the LD itself, there's no reason for it like Honor had to do (she didn't have the torpedoes) and there are plenty of reasons not to risk the mothership.