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OK KZT: What's wrong with AAC?

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Re: OK KZT: What's wrong with AAC?
Post by kzt   » Mon Apr 11, 2022 1:53 pm

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ThinksMarkedly wrote:So how does she end it, once and for all, without a surrender?

They wait for the surrender from Queen Elizabeth. And for the next wave of hundreds of SD(P)s from Bolthole due in a few months. Taking the Manticoran home system is a game winning move, as you have just removed the sole source of ammo for the MA, and about 75% of the shipyards. Taking Haven is not. It's bad, but not nearly equivalent.

Without 8th fleet there is pretty much no way for the Manticoran home system hold out. The Andy's could be there and they would get crushed too. The firepower the RHN brought was absurd without Apollo, they will have somewhere around 80 SD(P)s intact and dozens of damaged SD(P)s left after they crush 3rd.
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Re: OK KZT: What's wrong with AAC?
Post by tlb   » Mon Apr 11, 2022 1:58 pm

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tlb wrote:It may be that the Queen was so angered by her presumption that Haven had killed the anbassador and tried to kill Princess Ruth and Queen Berry (apparently to scuttle the peace conference?!); that she ordered Operation Sanskrit to resume and the Admiralty Lords could not see any reason to hold back.

ThinksMarkedly wrote:It might have contributed, but I don't think it was the sole or even main reason. The operation had been planned all along, I think.

Here is where they discuss the reasoning in chapter 52 of At All Costs:
"I suppose," William Alexander said heavily, "that the real question before us isn't whether or not we hold the Peeps responsible for their actions, but what we do about it.
"Hamish," he turned to his brother, "what are our military options?"
"Essentially what they were before Pritchart's invitation," Hamish replied. "One thing that's changed is that Eighth Fleet's had longer to receive munitions and train with them. We've got a few new wrinkles we think are going to make our ships considerably more effective, and the additional training time will stand Eighth Fleet in good stead. However, at this time, Eighth Fleet is the only formation we've got which is fully trained with the new weapons. It's also the only formation that's equipped with the new weapons, because only the Invictuses and the Graysons' late-flight Harringtons—" he smiled wryly at the class name, despite his somber mood "—can operate them without refitting."
"Why is that?" Grantville asked. "I thought the pods were the same dimensions?"
"They are, but only the ships built with Keyhole capability from the outset can handle the Mark Two platforms, and they're essential to making the new missiles work. We can refit with Keyhole II—in fact, the decision to build that in is part of what's delayed the Andermani refits—but it requires placing the ship in yard hands for at least eight to ten weeks. And, frankly, we can't stand down our existing ships that long when we're this tightly strapped. All our new construction is being altered on the ways to be Keyhole II-capable, and when it starts coming into commission, we can probably start pulling the older ships back for refit.
"But at the moment, only Eighth Fleet is really equipped to handle them, and even they have only partial loadouts on the new pods. We're attempting to get into full production on them as quickly as possible, but we've hit some bottlenecks, and security issues have restricted the number of production facilities we could commit to them."
"But Eighth Fleet could resume active operations immediately?"
"Yes," Hamish said firmly, trying to ignore the icy shiver which went through him at the thought of Honor going back into combat when he'd allowed himself to hope so hard for a diplomatic solution. And trying not to think about her bitter disappointment—and Emily's—if she found herself unable to be there for their daughter's birth after all.
"And what does our defensive posture look like?"
"That, too, is essentially what it was, but there are improvements on the horizon. We're pressing ahead with the system defense version of Apollo, and we ought to be able to begin deploying it very soon. We're still looking at some production bottlenecks, but once we get the system-defense pods deployed in numbers, we'll have much greater security at home.
"We're in a little better shape in Talbott, as well, because O'Malley's on station at Monica now. Given ONI's current estimates of Solarian capabilities, and bearing in mind Terekhov's after-action report on the performance of the Solly battlecruisers the Monicans used, O'Malley can almost certainly destroy anything Verrochio could assemble to throw at him for at least the next two to four months. In fact, Verrochio would have to be heavily reinforced before he'd have any chance at all of evicting us from Monica, much less the Cluster as a whole.
"As far as direct action against the home system by the League is concerned, sheer distance would work in our favor. They aren't going to invade us successfully through the Junction, not with the number of missile pods we've got covering the central nexus. That means they've got to do it the hard way, which leaves them with something on the order of a six-month voyage just to get here. Which doesn't even take into consideration the fact that they're going to have to mobilize, bring together, and logistically support a fleet with overwhelming numerical superiority if they expect to offset our tactical and technological advantages.
"To be honest, I'm reminded of something a wet-navy admiral from Old Earth once said. For eighteen months to two years, possibly even twice that long, we'd run wild. It's unlikely the Sollies recognize just how much things have changed in the last five to ten T-years, which probably means they'd commit grossly inadequate force levels, at least initially. Eventually, they'd realize what was happening, though. And if they had the stomach for it, they could use their sheer size to soak up whatever we did to them while they got their own R and D to work on matching weapons and cranked up their own building capacity.
"The bottom line is that my current estimate is that we could do enormous damage to them—far more, I'm certain, then any of their strategists or politicians would imagine was possible. But quantity has a quality all its own, and we simply aren't big enough to militarily defeat the Solarian League if it's prepared to buckle down and pay the cost to beat us. We don't have the ships or the manpower to occupy the number of star systems we'd have to occupy if we wanted to achieve military victory. They, on the other hand, have effectively unlimited manpower and productive capacity. In the end, that would tell. And even if that weren't true, it overlooks the fact that the Peeps already have—or soon will have—enough wallers with broadly equivalent capabilities to pound us under. Especially if we're distracted by dealing with the League."
"But what I seem to hear you saying," Grantville said intently, "is that whatever the League ultimately does, nothing it can do in the next, say, six months is going to have a significant impact on us?"
"That time estimate's probably a bit optimistic, assuming we take any heavy losses against Haven," Hamish replied. "Overall, though, that's fairly accurate."
"Then it seems to me we've got to take the position that that six months—or whatever shorter period we actually have—-represents our window for dealing with the Peeps," the Prime Minister said.
"Except for the fact that by the end of that window, their numerical advantage in SD(P)s will be on the order of three-to-one or even higher," Hamish said
.
"Nothing we can do will change that," Elizabeth said flatly. "We're building as quickly as we can; they're doing the same thing. The threat zone until the ships we've laid down can equalize the numbers is beyond our control . . . unless we can do something to whittle the Peeps down."
"You're thinking about Sanskrit," Hamish said, equally flatly.
Most of the people in the Cabinet Room had no idea what Sanskrit was. Grantville, Hamish, the Queen, and Sir Anthony Langtry did, and Elizabeth nodded.
"You just said Eighth Fleet has the new weapons. If we use them, if we can convince the Peeps we've got more of them—that we've reequipped with them across the board—that's got to affect their strategic thinking. It may force them to do what we wanted all along and fritter away their wall of battle defending rear area systems. Or it may even convince them they've gotten their sums wrong and they don't have sufficient numbers to offset our individual superiority. In which case, the bastards may actually have to sit down and talk to us after all."
"It's possible," Hamish agreed. "I can't predict how probable it might be. A lot would depend on how their analysts evaluate the situation after they run into Mistletoe and Apollo. They might not draw the conclusions we'd expect them to, since they won't have the same information we have about the systems' capabilities and availability. And I don't think anyone at Admiralty House would be prepared to predict exactly what their military reaction might be."
"That's a given," Elizabeth said, nodding. "But you say we'll be deploying the system-defense Apollos shortly. That would bolster our rear area security, wouldn't it?"
"Considerably," Hamish replied. "But we don't have them deployed yet."
"Still, Eighth Fleet already has Apollo, and it's part of Home Fleet's strategic reserve, isn't it, Ham?" Grantville asked.
"Yes it is, but it can only be in one place at a time," Hamish pointed out. "If it's out raiding Peep star systems, then it can't be here, defending the home system."
"But if we launch Sanskrit, then immediately bring Eighth Fleet home to Trevor's Star, it would be back in its covering position before Theisman could react to the new weapons systems, wouldn't it? I mean, one of the advantages of basing Eighth Fleet at Trevor's Star is that it's ninety light-years closer to Haven than Manticore is. So even if we hit a target like Lovat, Eighth Fleet can be back in position to cover the home system a good three weeks before Theisman could get a fleet here to attack us, even if he sent it straight from Haven the instant he heard about Sanskrit, right?
"
Note that they are only talking about O'Malley's ships at Monica, although it is possible that the Lynx Terminal was reinforced to cover as the forts were being built.
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Re: OK KZT: What's wrong with AAC?
Post by Theemile   » Mon Apr 11, 2022 2:46 pm

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tlb wrote:
tlb wrote:It may be that the Queen was so angered by her presumption that Haven had killed the anbassador and tried to kill Princess Ruth and Queen Berry (apparently to scuttle the peace conference?!); that she ordered Operation Sanskrit to resume and the Admiralty Lords could not see any reason to hold back.

ThinksMarkedly wrote:It might have contributed, but I don't think it was the sole or even main reason. The operation had been planned all along, I think.

Here is where they discuss the reasoning in chapter 52 of At All Costs:
"I suppose," William Alexander said heavily, "that the real question before us isn't whether or not we hold the Peeps responsible for their actions, but what we do about it.
"Hamish," he turned to his brother, "what are our military options?"
"Essentially what they were before Pritchart's invitation," Hamish replied. "One thing that's changed is that Eighth Fleet's had longer to receive munitions and train with them. We've got a few new wrinkles we think are going to make our ships considerably more effective, and the additional training time will stand Eighth Fleet in good stead. However, at this time, Eighth Fleet is the only formation we've got which is fully trained with the new weapons. It's also the only formation that's equipped with the new weapons, because only the Invictuses and the Graysons' late-flight Harringtons—" he smiled wryly at the class name, despite his somber mood "—can operate them without refitting."
"Why is that?" Grantville asked. "I thought the pods were the same dimensions?"
"They are, but only the ships built with Keyhole capability from the outset can handle the Mark Two platforms, and they're essential to making the new missiles work. We can refit with Keyhole II—in fact, the decision to build that in is part of what's delayed the Andermani refits—but it requires placing the ship in yard hands for at least eight to ten weeks. And, frankly, we can't stand down our existing ships that long when we're this tightly strapped. All our new construction is being altered on the ways to be Keyhole II-capable, and when it starts coming into commission, we can probably start pulling the older ships back for refit.
"But at the moment, only Eighth Fleet is really equipped to handle them, and even they have only partial loadouts on the new pods. We're attempting to get into full production on them as quickly as possible, but we've hit some bottlenecks, and security issues have restricted the number of production facilities we could commit to them."
"But Eighth Fleet could resume active operations immediately?"
"Yes," Hamish said firmly, trying to ignore the icy shiver which went through him at the thought of Honor going back into combat when he'd allowed himself to hope so hard for a diplomatic solution. And trying not to think about her bitter disappointment—and Emily's—if she found herself unable to be there for their daughter's birth after all.
"And what does our defensive posture look like?"
"That, too, is essentially what it was, but there are improvements on the horizon. We're pressing ahead with the system defense version of Apollo, and we ought to be able to begin deploying it very soon. We're still looking at some production bottlenecks, but once we get the system-defense pods deployed in numbers, we'll have much greater security at home.
"We're in a little better shape in Talbott, as well, because O'Malley's on station at Monica now. Given ONI's current estimates of Solarian capabilities, and bearing in mind Terekhov's after-action report on the performance of the Solly battlecruisers the Monicans used, O'Malley can almost certainly destroy anything Verrochio could assemble to throw at him for at least the next two to four months. In fact, Verrochio would have to be heavily reinforced before he'd have any chance at all of evicting us from Monica, much less the Cluster as a whole.
"As far as direct action against the home system by the League is concerned, sheer distance would work in our favor. They aren't going to invade us successfully through the Junction, not with the number of missile pods we've got covering the central nexus. That means they've got to do it the hard way, which leaves them with something on the order of a six-month voyage just to get here. Which doesn't even take into consideration the fact that they're going to have to mobilize, bring together, and logistically support a fleet with overwhelming numerical superiority if they expect to offset our tactical and technological advantages.
"To be honest, I'm reminded of something a wet-navy admiral from Old Earth once said. For eighteen months to two years, possibly even twice that long, we'd run wild. It's unlikely the Sollies recognize just how much things have changed in the last five to ten T-years, which probably means they'd commit grossly inadequate force levels, at least initially. Eventually, they'd realize what was happening, though. And if they had the stomach for it, they could use their sheer size to soak up whatever we did to them while they got their own R and D to work on matching weapons and cranked up their own building capacity.
"The bottom line is that my current estimate is that we could do enormous damage to them—far more, I'm certain, then any of their strategists or politicians would imagine was possible. But quantity has a quality all its own, and we simply aren't big enough to militarily defeat the Solarian League if it's prepared to buckle down and pay the cost to beat us. We don't have the ships or the manpower to occupy the number of star systems we'd have to occupy if we wanted to achieve military victory. They, on the other hand, have effectively unlimited manpower and productive capacity. In the end, that would tell. And even if that weren't true, it overlooks the fact that the Peeps already have—or soon will have—enough wallers with broadly equivalent capabilities to pound us under. Especially if we're distracted by dealing with the League."
"But what I seem to hear you saying," Grantville said intently, "is that whatever the League ultimately does, nothing it can do in the next, say, six months is going to have a significant impact on us?"
"That time estimate's probably a bit optimistic, assuming we take any heavy losses against Haven," Hamish replied. "Overall, though, that's fairly accurate."
"Then it seems to me we've got to take the position that that six months—or whatever shorter period we actually have—-represents our window for dealing with the Peeps," the Prime Minister said.
"Except for the fact that by the end of that window, their numerical advantage in SD(P)s will be on the order of three-to-one or even higher," Hamish said
.
"Nothing we can do will change that," Elizabeth said flatly. "We're building as quickly as we can; they're doing the same thing. The threat zone until the ships we've laid down can equalize the numbers is beyond our control . . . unless we can do something to whittle the Peeps down."
"You're thinking about Sanskrit," Hamish said, equally flatly.
Most of the people in the Cabinet Room had no idea what Sanskrit was. Grantville, Hamish, the Queen, and Sir Anthony Langtry did, and Elizabeth nodded.
"You just said Eighth Fleet has the new weapons. If we use them, if we can convince the Peeps we've got more of them—that we've reequipped with them across the board—that's got to affect their strategic thinking. It may force them to do what we wanted all along and fritter away their wall of battle defending rear area systems. Or it may even convince them they've gotten their sums wrong and they don't have sufficient numbers to offset our individual superiority. In which case, the bastards may actually have to sit down and talk to us after all."
"It's possible," Hamish agreed. "I can't predict how probable it might be. A lot would depend on how their analysts evaluate the situation after they run into Mistletoe and Apollo. They might not draw the conclusions we'd expect them to, since they won't have the same information we have about the systems' capabilities and availability. And I don't think anyone at Admiralty House would be prepared to predict exactly what their military reaction might be."
"That's a given," Elizabeth said, nodding. "But you say we'll be deploying the system-defense Apollos shortly. That would bolster our rear area security, wouldn't it?"
"Considerably," Hamish replied. "But we don't have them deployed yet."
"Still, Eighth Fleet already has Apollo, and it's part of Home Fleet's strategic reserve, isn't it, Ham?" Grantville asked.
"Yes it is, but it can only be in one place at a time," Hamish pointed out. "If it's out raiding Peep star systems, then it can't be here, defending the home system."
"But if we launch Sanskrit, then immediately bring Eighth Fleet home to Trevor's Star, it would be back in its covering position before Theisman could react to the new weapons systems, wouldn't it? I mean, one of the advantages of basing Eighth Fleet at Trevor's Star is that it's ninety light-years closer to Haven than Manticore is. So even if we hit a target like Lovat, Eighth Fleet can be back in position to cover the home system a good three weeks before Theisman could get a fleet here to attack us, even if he sent it straight from Haven the instant he heard about Sanskrit, right?
"
Note that they are only talking about O'Malley's ships at Monica, although it is possible that the Lynx Terminal was reinforced to cover as the forts were being built.



From the bar discussion "Reinforcements for BoMa", David said that the only other fleet at a Terminus and able to reinforce Manticore was the fleet at Lynx under Adm Blaine with 12 un-updated Medusas. The fleet was several light minutes off the terminus on maneuvers and was unable to return to Manticore until several hours after the shooting had stopped. Those 12 ships later formed 60% of the SD(p) strength of 10th fleet under Henke.

https://infodump.thefifthimperium.com/entry/Harrington/108/1/
******
RFC said "refitting a Beowulfan SD to Manticoran standards would be just as difficult as refitting a standard SLN SD to those standards. In other words, it would be cheaper and faster to build new ships."
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Re: OK KZT: What's wrong with AAC?
Post by ThinksMarkedly   » Mon Apr 11, 2022 6:16 pm

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kzt wrote:They wait for the surrender from Queen Elizabeth. And for the next wave of hundreds of SD(P)s from Bolthole due in a few months. Taking the Manticoran home system is a game winning move, as you have just removed the sole source of ammo for the MA, and about 75% of the shipyards. Taking Haven is not. It's bad, but not nearly equivalent.


I don't agree with that conclusion. The MBS is not the only production centre for the Alliance; Grayson probably represents at least half as much as the MBS. It didn't have Apollo production in place, but it was probably planned. New Berlin the same, though further behind and we know hadn't yet started even by Oyster Bay, over 7 months later.

But anyway, that doesn't answer my question: just how do Pritchart and Theisman convince Honor to stop shooting at Capital Fleet and trashing all the orbital military industry? Honor is not going to accept their word that they've sent nearly 350 SD(P)s to the MBS and thus should rush back home. Even if she believed them, she wouldn't leave while leaving the opportunity to destroy 100-200 RHN SD(P)s and their supporting infrastructure on the table. Those may be older ships, but there isn't a single navy in the Galaxy that would shrug after losing that many wallers. At this point in time, that detachment alone is bigger than all but two navies in the entire Galaxy! And losing Haven's production capacity has to be a major impact in the Havenite economy.

Even if that's the option they choose, the only way to save the spacers is to simply surrender those ships. That leaves Eighth Fleet free rein in the system, which could be enough to interdict the government leaving. Even if there are 1000 ships trying to run, would they take the chance that theirs is one of those that is forced to stop and captured?

And what of the impact on the RHN morale if the government runs?
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Re: OK KZT: What's wrong with AAC?
Post by ThinksMarkedly   » Mon Apr 11, 2022 6:20 pm

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Theemile wrote:From the bar discussion "Reinforcements for BoMa", David said that the only other fleet at a Terminus and able to reinforce Manticore was the fleet at Lynx under Adm Blaine with 12 un-updated Medusas. The fleet was several light minutes off the terminus on maneuvers and was unable to return to Manticore until several hours after the shooting had stopped. Those 12 ships later formed 60% of the SD(p) strength of 10th fleet under Henke.

https://infodump.thefifthimperium.com/entry/Harrington/108/1/


12 Medusas is over 10% as much as Home Fleet. Depending on when those were sent to cover the terminus, it might correspond to what Honor was talking about.
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Re: OK KZT: What's wrong with AAC?
Post by tlb   » Mon Apr 11, 2022 7:13 pm

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Theemile wrote:From the bar discussion "Reinforcements for BoMa", David said that the only other fleet at a Terminus and able to reinforce Manticore was the fleet at Lynx under Adm Blaine with 12 un-updated Medusas. The fleet was several light minutes off the terminus on maneuvers and was unable to return to Manticore until several hours after the shooting had stopped. Those 12 ships later formed 60% of the SD(p) strength of 10th fleet under Henke.

ThinksMarkedly wrote:12 Medusas is over 10% as much as Home Fleet. Depending on when those were sent to cover the terminus, it might correspond to what Honor was talking about.

I do not agree, Honor was talking about ships being sent from Home Fleet to Monica; so what she is specifically mentioning are the ships under O'Malley. See the words:
Under the circumstances, Admiral Khumalo felt he had no option but to request immediate reinforcement. Since it's possible Terekhov, or Khumalo, or both of them may find themselves in a shooting incident with Solarian units, the Admiralty felt it had no option but to dispatch a significant reinforcement from Home Fleet. Those units are already on their way to Monica.
I agree that there will be other movements not mentioned as the Admiralty makes adjustments, for example O'Malley grabbed screening units from the force at the Lynx terminal. But note that a task force of battle-cruisers IS a "significant reinforcement" of what is already at Talbott (most of which were taken to Monica and shot up).

Any way the Battle of Manticore did not happen until Henke was already at Talbott and Honor had made the first attack under Sanskrit, which is still weeks or months off in the future. Note that by that time O'Malley was back with Home Fleet.
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Re: OK KZT: What's wrong with AAC?
Post by ThinksMarkedly   » Mon Apr 11, 2022 7:50 pm

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tlb wrote:
Under the circumstances, Admiral Khumalo felt he had no option but to request immediate reinforcement. Since it's possible Terekhov, or Khumalo, or both of them may find themselves in a shooting incident with Solarian units, the Admiralty felt it had no option but to dispatch a significant reinforcement from Home Fleet. Those units are already on their way to Monica.
I agree that there will be other movements not mentioned as the Admiralty makes adjustments, for example O'Malley grabbed screening units from the force at the Lynx terminal. But note that a task force of battle-cruisers IS a "significant reinforcement" of what is already at Talbott (most of which were taken to Monica and shot up).

Any way the Battle of Manticore did not happen until Henke was already at Talbott and Honor had made the first attack under Sanskrit, which is still weeks or months off in the future. Note that by that time O'Malley was back with Home Fleet.


Yes, a force of RMN battlecruisers is significant reinforcement for Talbott, no doubt about that. He had had nothing bigger than a heavy cruiser, his own Hexapuma.

But it's all relative. What's a major reinforcement for Terekhov is not a major reduction for Home Fleet. So that still leaves open the reason why Sanskrit was delayed.
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Re: OK KZT: What's wrong with AAC?
Post by tlb   » Mon Apr 11, 2022 8:21 pm

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Under the circumstances, Admiral Khumalo felt he had no option but to request immediate reinforcement. Since it's possible Terekhov, or Khumalo, or both of them may find themselves in a shooting incident with Solarian units, the Admiralty felt it had no option but to dispatch a significant reinforcement from Home Fleet. Those units are already on their way to Monica.
tlb wrote: I agree that there will be other movements not mentioned as the Admiralty makes adjustments, for example O'Malley grabbed screening units from the force at the Lynx terminal. But note that a task force of battle-cruisers IS a "significant reinforcement" of what is already at Talbott (most of which were taken to Monica and shot up).

Any way the Battle of Manticore did not happen until Henke was already at Talbott and Honor had made the first attack under Sanskrit, which is still weeks or months off in the future. Note that by that time O'Malley was back with Home Fleet.

ThinksMarkedly wrote:Yes, a force of RMN battlecruisers is significant reinforcement for Talbott, no doubt about that. He had had nothing bigger than a heavy cruiser, his own Hexapuma.

But it's all relative. What's a major reinforcement for Terekhov is not a major reduction for Home Fleet. So that still leaves open the reason why Sanskrit was delayed.

The only delay mentioned in the command meeting is the following:
"But at the moment, only Eighth Fleet is really equipped to handle them, and even they have only partial loadouts on the new pods. We're attempting to get into full production on them as quickly as possible, but we've hit some bottlenecks, and security issues have restricted the number of production facilities we could commit to them."
"But Eighth Fleet could resume active operations immediately?"
"Yes," Hamish said firmly

I assume that you are not asking why Sanskrit was delayed before this meeting (although a lack of full pod loadouts would also account for that), since we all know that Henke delivering a request for talks at Torch caused a pause in operations.

PS: Khumalo's flagship at Talbott was HMS Hercules, an old Samothrace-class superdreadnought, so there was something bigger.
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Re: OK KZT: What's wrong with AAC?
Post by ThinksMarkedly   » Mon Apr 11, 2022 8:47 pm

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tlb wrote:The only delay mentioned in the command meeting is the following:[cut]


I meant when Honor was briefing her staff. It's the next paragraph from what you posted above, which you also provided:
"Obviously, all of these moves have implications for us. The most immediate one is that Home Fleet is now going to be understrength, and one of the functions of Eighth Fleet, like Third Fleet, is to serve as a ready reserve for Home Fleet. There's also the possibility that the Star Kingdom is about to find itself engaged against Solarian units, and no one is prepared to predict the possible ramifications of that.

"Because the entire strategic situation's suddenly been thrown into such a state of flux, Admiralty House has ordered the temporary stand down of Operation Sanskrit. For now, we're postponing the execution date by three weeks.


I'm reacting to her saying that the Admiralty had ordered the stand down of Sanskrit because Home Fleet was understrength. Peeling off two or three squadrons of BCs wouldn't make Home Fleet understrength. Therefore, there must have been some movement of SDs we weren't aware of.

I assume that you are not asking why Sanskrit was delayed before this meeting (although a lack of full pod loadouts would also account for that), since we all know that Henke delivering a request for talks at Torch caused a pause in operations.


Earlier yes, but not the pause due to the Torch Summit. Now I'm not sure when that scene above with Honor happened.

PS: Khumalo's flagship at Talbott was HMS Hercules, an old Samothrace-class superdreadnought, so there was something bigger.


Bigger yes, but not necessarily more powerful. I'd put my money on a force of modern BCs against a lone, older SD.
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Re: OK KZT: What's wrong with AAC?
Post by cthia   » Tue Apr 12, 2022 2:39 am

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rtthompson wrote:
cthia wrote:Thanks for ironing that out. So, Eighth Fleet was considered a backup reserve. Backup implies that 8th Fleet should always be reasonably available.


no, "backup reserve" just meant that Third Fleet was the "primary reserve," especially since they had to make up the 8th Fleet as a new organization after the ceasefire; Third already existed at Trevor's Star. It's "reasonably available" when it isn't deployed.

Sorry, but somehow I missed this post. Anyway, that makes sense in retrospect. So, Honor had to back up the crack smoking Kuzak, AND Home Fleet.

When I opened this present can of worms ...
BTW, are things worse than I thought? What ships from Home Fleet were sent to Monica? A significant amount of firepower? What missiles?

I was contemplating the questionable call to keep drawing down Home Fleet in the face of a lapse of Apollo coverage. Especially since Eighth Fleet was expected to go swashbuckling.

Ok, I know my two centicredits aren't going to be popular, what's new, but let me stop beating around the bush ...

Just to cover the MBS and an apparently understrength Home Fleet shouldn't the Admiralty have been recalling significant units from the front? Just how important was Monica in comparison to the MBS?

And Henke should have been recalled home. Didn't she have Keyhole II capable ships?

A lot of questionable calls were made by the Admiralty. I know that risk is part of the game and it is a heavy burden the Admiralty has to bear. But stupidity isn't a burden the Admiralty has to bear.

Maybe the whole damn Admiralty was smoking crack. Wait a minute... did the bad decisions start after Basilisk Station and interacting with the Stilties and their very potent weed?

Son, your mother says I have to hang you. Personally I don't think this is a capital offense. But if I don't hang you, she's gonna hang me and frankly, I'm not the one in trouble. —cthia's father. Incident in ? Axiom of Common Sense
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