ThinksMarkedly wrote:tlb wrote:I suppose it could be read that way, but I am not sure there is a good example of that happening. Only during the two times that Sir Edward Janacek was First lord of the Admiralty was she even in political conflict with the Officer in charge of Naval conduct; in both cases she simply did her job to the best of her ability.
And when she was put on half-pay, she went to do policy in the House of Lords. She didn't go rogue.
She also did go to Grayson often and got intelligence from the GSN and the Protector. Being a citizen of two nations and a Fleet Admiral in their respective two navies, she can always go to the one that doesn't have a hostile government to her, and continue the policies she believes are correct from there. In the case of Grayson, the Protector has far more control over policy than the Queen/Empress does.
And that's not to mention the other three governments where she has a considerable amount of influence with: Haven, Beowulf, and the Andermani. She can talk to her brother, to Theisman, or to von Habenstrage and those have the ears of their respective political leaders. We haven't seen yet a scene where she has an audience with Anderman himself, but if she asked for it, she'd probably get it.
And that was my point: she'd have the backing of likely three, probably four of the most powerful nations in the Galaxy, so no one would believe the fifth wouldn't be on-board. And even if they did, it wouldn't matter because would have the backing of those three-or-four nations' policy-makers.
Interesting.
What if going to the House of Lords and other measures fail to work?
Going to Grayson is also interesting. We know that Grayson and Manticore was at odds during High Ridge's tenure. On the one hand, people are saying that Honor cannot go rogue, but Thinksmarkedly's notion of her going to Grayson for political support for her policies implies that Grayson will go rogue against the GA. In a sense, Grayson certainly went rogue against High Ridge's government by continuing its military buildup, which could have sent the wrong message to Manticore's enemies.
At any rate, running to Grayson for support in pulling off her rogue operation should allow the Queen to disavow her actions. And if Beth disavows her actions, would the remaining GA be obligated to attack Grayson?
And, if the GA does not attack Grayson, who else will? Even if Honor does go rogue, why would either member of the GA have to disavow her? What government is powerful enough to attack the GA, even if the GA is billed as being bad by the media? The superpower who wins the war also wins the ability to make policy, as I have been told countless times by most everyone in the forum.
Effectively, the message Honor is sending is that she has displaced the SLN as the enforcer of the Eridani Edict and beyond. Who is going to argue with "the enforcer of galactic policy" ?
Did anyone argue with the SL when they were the enforcer?