penny wrote:Drawing on nodal response forces (thanks again) is going to be an overused and exhausting strategy "deployed" by the Admiralty out of necessity. And the idea of using LACs to defend systems is not my own. I remember it from a long lost discussion where it was suggested that LACs, because of their firepower, could and would be used as pickets to plug the holes in rear areas after Oyster Bay. I didn't agree with the idea either, and I tried to point out the disadvantages upstream which I admitted to harboring for a long time. Since that discussion. But I am sorry, I can't take the credit for that faux pas. Although I agree that there probably won't be any choice. The RMN didn't have enough ships to cover its responsibilities before Oyster Bay. And now they're adding more and more systems.
I have to attend church daily when I log onto the site because all of you preach to me incessantly about how much time it takes to build ships. What ass are all of you pulling new ships out of for the RMN?; to think that they can afford to send a ready squadron of destroyers and ~ 212 LACs to every Tier 1 system let alone each Tier 2 system. Stop drinking!
This all depends on when these attacks will come to pass. If the effects of Oyster Bay are still noticeable, then I agree the RMN hasn't got the yards to build that many light ships and LACs. We know they prosecuted the war with the SLN with older Saganami A and B because there weren't enough Cs. But mind you the Python Lump had come out of the yards before OB struck, and the CLACs had been full. High Ridge had finished building those and building LACs was cheap.
But if that's true, then so it is for the MAN. The MAN had no LDs to send to execute Oyster Bay, so if the effects of that are still in the recent past, then the MAN has no ships to execute your plan. Moreover, any conventional forces they might have drawn to execute this part of the plan would have come out of Galton, which no longer can do that.
So we can safely assume that this plan you're describing will not happen before at least 1928 PD. At that time, the RMN will have six bases in the MBS to build stuff from. And LACs are cheap and easy to build.
In fact, the RMN & GSN could simply do a tech exchange with the Andermani, Beouwlf, and Haven: they give the full design of the modern LAC, with fission plants and BC-grade grasers, to those three in exchange for their building 1000 LACs each for the first two. And Manticore's economy is not completely hurt by the loss of the stations (the Junction is still generating revenue!), they can pay for another thousand LACs in the next five years too and loan 1000 from the 1500 that the GSN would be given out of the tech exchange deal. That would add 3500 LACs to the RMN's
existing roster of LACs, many of which would be freed from active operation roles with the fleet's downsizing. That would give an average of 100 LACs per system in the SEM that weren't there in 1922.
And I'm low-balling here. Haven has far more than 35 systems to protect. They'll be making LACs faster than Henry Ford made Model Ts, so the economies of scale will speak up at some point.
The same Maths applies to Mycroft stations and to missiles themselves. Honor brought 2 million missiles to Galton at a time when the RMN's own stations were no yet up and running.
Finally, I don't think the MAN can execute your strategy in 1928. They have the advantage of their infrastructure not having been blown to bits compared to Manticore, but all that does is put them on the same starting point as the Andermani and Haven. But behind in terms of quality and quantity: I expect that the Andermani have 2 major yards and Haven has at least 3 in addition to Bolthole, and a few more minor ones. In a build out race, the MAlign loses.
They can't fight on quantity. They need a strategy that negates the advantages that the GA has and therefore makes each MAN unit have an outsized contribution. I like your ideas, except for the fact that they require tying up ships for months on missions with low likelihood of big upside.
I even agree with the discussion long ago about the possibility that LACs will be used for picket duty, again, out of necessity and the realities of war. I just disagree with it being an optimal response. But the real bull in the china shop is that deploying LACs to lower tier systems will at least appease the pleas to send SOMETHING. I imagine piracy has increased one thousand percent since the SLNs spanking. Manticore cannot afford to take on new systems if it is not going to protect them!
Indeed. The LACs serve as a very good deterrent against local pirates or even simple smugglers. But they are actually really good against everyone's Navy out there outside of the GA: just look at what Mike Henke did to 70 superdreadnoughts when those came to Spindle, with just cruisers and Apollo missiles.
That won't work for the future and the GA powers will be simulating what happens if someone with their level of tech comes to visit. But it does buy time for them to do exactly that and produce the next set of defences.
That is a thought the RFN should consider, hence, that is why I think these systems will be attacked by the MAN. It will supply the political pressure on Manticore to spread its forces thin and perhaps cause some of those systems to leave the alliance into the waiting arms of the RFN.
The MAN does not want anyone home when they come calling if possible.
The RMN and RHN and IAN spreading their forces thin are still units below the wall, unlike Operation Sanskrit. There would be no need to deploy Battle Fleets because the plan you're describing is taking out isolated ships with isolated ships. There is no Battle Fleet that can only be fought with another.
So even if those three have to redistribute their lighter ships to a level that planners wouldn't want, how does that get the MAlign its victory? What's the next step? The forces you've described can't take on those CruRons and Desrons by themselves, and the Battle Fleets are still intact.