Sacrifice of the Angels Ending A Deus Ex Machina?

Discussion in 'Star Trek: Deep Space Nine' started by M.A.C.O., Oct 27, 2012.

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Was the ending Deus Ex Machina?

  1. Yes

    24 vote(s)
    37.5%
  2. No

    40 vote(s)
    62.5%
  1. R. Star

    R. Star Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    It had every reason to. The Prophets destroyed nearly three thousand ships. That's every reason for massive retaliation alone. Not to mention as things stood with the Prophets, the Dominion couldn't use the wormhole, but the Federation could. So why would they even think of allowing their enemies even a POSSIBLE tactical advantage like that?

    Sure, they have forces in the Alpha Quadrant but they're quite self-sufficent as proven in the early season 7 arc when Dukat collapsed the wormhole. They didn't just fold up and die, they kept on going. It stands to reason the Dominion is expanding in the Gamma Quadrant at a steady pace, so too would the Alpha Quadrant Dominion and eventually they'd link up.

    And if the Alpha Quadrant Dominion loses the war? Well then they have at least fifty years to prepare for a powerful and hostile power. As it stands NOT collapsing it was a worst case scenario for them as they lost anyways and Federation can attack them anytime they want.
     
  2. Tiberius

    Tiberius Commodore Commodore

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    But to destroy the wormhole means the Dominion would be making sure they could NEVER get any more reinforcements. As long as the wormhole was still there, they still had a chance of being able to do SOMETHING to get more ships.

    So they don't need to destroy the wormhole. The Feds have enough on their plate so they aren't going to be sending fleets through the wormhole to destroy the Doms in the Gamma quadrant.

    But the Dominion was convinced that they would win.

    And anyway, why would they send a fleet to destroy the wormhole? It would take ships away from defence lines (weakening their position), send them to one of the most heavily defended outposts in the Federation and anyway, if the Prophets stopped them once, why would the Dominion think they could destroy the wormhole at all?
     
  3. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    Not if it means shooting yourself in the foot in the process. If there are enemy troops holding a bridge that you absolutely need intact because it's the only way to supply your invasion force on the other side, you'd be a total idiot to blow up the bridge, because you'd be damaging your own cause. No, you'd find some way to get rid of the enemy troops while leaving the bridge intact so that your guys could still use it.


    You're making the mistake of assuming that the two sides were equal. The Dominion has been a force of conquest in the Gamma Quadrant for a couple of thousand years, IIRC, and is far more aggressive than the Federation. Logically, it would be a vastly larger and stronger power. I mean, think about it. An empire built on force and intimidation couldn't survive if it sent all its military forces off to the other side of the galaxy. Its people would revolt and the empire would fall apart, or else its neighboring enemies would invade and overthrow it. Therefore, logically, we must conclude that the majority of the Dominion's forces were still in the Gamma Quadrant maintaining control of their home territory, that they only sent a portion through to conquer Alpha. Yet that small portion was so powerful that even the alliance of the three mightiest states in the region was in serious danger of defeat at its hands.

    So there's a fundamental imbalance of power here in the Dominion's favor. The AQ powers weren't that much of a threat even if they did send forces through.


    Maybe. But we mustn't make the mistake of assuming the Founders think like humans. The unity of the Link is everything to them. They care more about maintaining their connections to one another than they do about anything else, even galactic conquest -- which is why Odo was able to convince them to end the war by agreeing to return home and stay with them (along with curing their disease). I just don't see them jumping to a plan that would mean deliberately stranding their own people in hostile territory. Sure, they live long and could eventually make their way back home -- but only if they didn't get killed by the enemy before then. And without reinforcements from home, that fate became more likely. As I said, they'd investigate all other possible options for restoring safe passage through the wormhole before they'd consider destroying it.

    Besides, isn't it a moot argument? As I've already mentioned a couple of times, the Changeling Bashir sabotaged Sisko's plan to collapse the wormhole and instead made the wormhole so stable that it became impossible for the Federation to destroy it. So what makes you think it would've been any more possible for the Dominion to destroy it? Sure, maybe they had some extra superscience the Federation didn't, but we don't know that. It's kind of a waste to argue the strategic value of a choice that, for all we know, was not even on the table.
     
  4. Hugh Mann

    Hugh Mann Lieutenant

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    I don't think there was a significant imbalance of power as you say. During the episode, and possibly elsewhere in the series, Dukat occasionally made remarks that strongly implied he sought to challenge the Dominion one day, and regarded the Cardassian Union's joining of the Dominion as temporary. If the Dominion really were vastly more powerful than the Federation, which the Cardassian Union couldn't seriously challenge on its own, then Dukat would have known this and would never have thought the Cardassian Union capable of challenging the Dominion. Dukat was many things, but he wasn't psychotic (well, not that severely, anyways).
     
  5. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    Dukat was always a megalomaniac, or at least a clinical narcissist. Think about it. After decades of being hated by the Bajorans and being forced to give up the planet due to intractable, violent resistance, Dukat still believed he could convince the Bajoran people to love him and be grateful for his benevolence. He always had an unrealistic sense of his own ability to triumph.

    And who's to say he really understood how big and powerful the Dominion was? They may have misled him on that point.

    Besides, one person's subjective opinion doesn't do anything to change the factors I mentioned before. They wouldn't have sent more than a limited percentage of their forces to conquer a faraway territory, and that limited percentage was more than a match for the UFP, Klingons, and Romulans combined. As the recent presidential election showed, all the opinions in the world can't outweigh simple arithmetic.
     
  6. Hugh Mann

    Hugh Mann Lieutenant

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    Dukat was a narcissist, yes, but he, as you say, cannot outweigh simply arithmetic through his narcissism. I am strongly doubtful that Dukat wouldn't have had some clue as to the true strength of the Dominion; you do not simply "mislead" someone on such a matter. An appropriate analogy would be the United States trying to lie to the leader of an extraterritorial entity about its true size in order to let it be annexed into the Union. It doesn't really make sense.

    You also seem to be taking a lot of leaps. A conquering army is not the same as an occupation army; the Dominion's large fleet of warships sent through the wormhole at the end of Sacrifice of Angels would've been mostly useless for controlling a domestic population. It is also clear that the Dominion does not strictly rely on simple force to keep its empire together, and that it does make extensive use of diplomacy to build complex alliances that help maintain the integrity of their union. Yes, the threat of force is always there in the background (but then again it is as well in the Federation, so it's a wash), and it is also clear that the Dominion is strongly authoritarian in nature, but it is also quite clear that they do not require large numbers of ships and troops absolutely everywhere at all times to keep the Dominion intact. There is no reason to suspect that the Dominion would've fallen apart domestically if they sent a substantial portion of their military forces to the Alpha Quadrant.

    Little, if anything, in the episode proves that the Dominion is vastly more powerful than the Federation. There is more evidence, in my view, that shows the Dominion is not, though it is not conclusive either way.
     
  7. Edit_XYZ

    Edit_XYZ Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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    Hugh Mann

    Dukat didn't really care about arithmetic/feasibility when it came to his narcissism.
    Christopher's example with the bajorans proves this.


    It was made clear in 'The search' that the ONLY think keeping conquered species in line is the threat of the jem'hadar. NOT diplomacy, nor anything else.
    The founders are FAR too paranoid to allow themselves to become vulnerable to domestic revolt for a foreign adventure.

    Meaning, the massive dominion occupation army (needed for a massive territory) was in the gamma quadrant.
    So was the main dominion industrial base.

    The dominion expeditionary force and its rushedly installed industrial base was close to overwhelming the federation+klingons and kept up with the federation+klingons+romulans.

    If an expeditionary force could do that, then the dominion, in its entirety, is FAR stronger than the federation+klingons+romulans.


    The ease with which the dominion created jem'hadar (and ships) leads to the same conclusion.
    As does the age of the dominion - 2000 years spent conquering.


    On the other hand, there is little evidence that the dominion is weaker than the alpha quadrant powers - of course, you named none.
     
  8. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    You have got to be kidding me. The Federation was losing the war badly for most of the duration of the story arc. Even with the Klingons and Romulans as allies, they were at a disadvantage. The Jack Pack calculated that total defeat was inevitable. We were shown over and over again that even the fraction of the Dominion forces in the Alpha Quadrant were an overwhelming threat, far more powerful than the good guys. Of course they were, because this is fiction, and the bad guys are always presented as a superior and unstoppable force so that the stakes are as high and dramatic as possible and so that the heroes' eventual triumph is more impressive.

    And again, why are we even debating this? The wormhole couldn't have been destroyed. It simply wasn't an option. I recommend you watch the show again, because you don't seem to be remembering it very well.
     
  9. R. Star

    R. Star Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    Well the conversation seems to be over. Perhaps we should have a list of what we can and cannot think and discuss, as to avoid presenting differing opinions. :p
     
  10. Hugh Mann

    Hugh Mann Lieutenant

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    You have got to be kidding me. The war was going badly for the Federation during the arc that culminated in Sacrifice of Angels, but this has nothing to do with the size of the Dominion. The "Jack Pack" calculated total defeat as inevitable--and were proven wrong, so I don't see why you would bring that up. We are also not shown that the Dominion is vastly superior in all respects to the Federation and its allies. Once the Romulans intervened, the war began to go quite well for the Federation (culminating in the successful invasion of Chin'Toka, which the Dominion couldn't even afford to properly defend with an actual fleet, relying instead on the orbital weapons platforms that proved unreliable and mostly useless compared with a proper fleet) until the Breen intervened in turn and rendered 2/3rds of the Allied fleet strength useless.

    I also never said the wormhole could've been destroyed (at that time; in Tears of the Prophets it was at least rendered unusable for a short period). Nor did I suggest the Dominion is substantially weaker than the Alpha quadrant powers. It seems much more reasonable to assume that they were roughly an even match, with an edge to the Dominion because they, at the start of the war, were much more mobilized, as could be expected of such an entity.

    I don't see anything that shows it is unreasonable to suppose that the Dominion is not vastly more powerful than the Federation. It seems more likely to me that the Dominion (attempted to) deploy the bulk of their strength to the Alpha quadrant in order to eliminate the threat they perceived from the powers there. Besides, history has shown us that any empire that requires such a massive occupation army at all times is not feasible, as it will fall apart under the economic weight of it all. In "The Search" it was stated that the threat of Jem'Hadar was the only thing keeping the species in line, but that can be interpreted in ways other than the way in which you are interpreting it; it does not have to mean that there are fleets of Jem'Hadar ships flying around everywhere, but rather an emphatic way of identifying the Jem'Hadar as the violent arm of the state (which is the role of the military and police in every society). Certainly, we see no on-screen (e.g. visual as opposed to spoken) evidence that the Jem'Hadar are everywhere; in "The Die is Cast" they have only a fleet of 150 ships defending the Founders' homeworld, all attack ships and none of the stronger battlecruisers. Wouldn't they have a stronger force protecting the most valued planet in their empire if the Dominion really had such a large military force?

    And I agree, by the way, that Dukat is not always well-grounded in reality, but I absolutely stand by my point that he would never have even thought of trying to defy the Dominion if it really were an order of magnitude or more stronger than the Federation. If the Dominion had tens or hundreds of thousands of ships, even he wouldn't have thought it possible for the Cardassian Union, with its few thousands of ships, to defy the Dominion and rise above it. This is one key piece of evidence that you are ignoring.
     
  11. Vanyel

    Vanyel The Imperious Leader Premium Member

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    The Battle of the Omarion Nebula was a trap laid by the Founders. They infiltrated the Tal'Shiar, and were two steps ahead of the Obsidian Order and Tal'Shiar fleets.

    At this point Federation, Klingon, Romulan and Cardassian shields were useless against the Dominion weapons. 150 attack ships were more than enough to destroy the fleet and cripple the Tal'Shiar and Obsidian Order.

    The Founders were not on the World that was attacked. It's possible that the infiltrator changed Romulan and Cardassian records to show this world to be the Founders home, while the real home was light years away. Then devices were placed on the planet to give false life readings to her invading fleet.

    And even if the right world was attacked, that it was a trap, false sensor readings would mean the Founders had just moved to a new world.

    Now, what does all this have to do with the OP's question?
     
  12. Nightdiamond

    Nightdiamond Commodore Commodore

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    I'd have to take the middle ground on how powerful the Dominion was.

    I wouldn't say the Dominion was vastly more powerful than the Federation, but at least earlier on, the storyline suggested they were more militarily powerful than the Federation-and the Klingons combined.

    They were able to attempt to field an extra 2800 ships during the war, which even the Federation admitted that if they got through, meant the end of the war.

    Later assesment from Vreenak showed how deficient the Federation situation was in comparison to the Dominion.

    The Dominion seemed to be capable of setting up a self reliant system no matter where they were, once the Jem Hadar, White, and ship building factories were in place.

    It would have been a replica of the Gamma Quadrant Dominion, had they won.

    Problem was, they never really got them into place.

    Now, on the other hand, once the Romulans entered the war, the momentum came to a hault.

    The ships are spread thin, they're retreating, they're losing planets.... obviously something happened on their side.
     
    Last edited: Nov 11, 2012
  13. M.A.C.O.

    M.A.C.O. Commodore Commodore

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    I wanted to ask and confirm something. Wasn't the Dominion planning on invading the Federation before the discovery of the wormhole? It's been years since I watched DS9 through completion. I recall that the Founders had the intention to invade the Alpha and Beta Quads prior to making contact with Sisko and co. The Bajoran wormhole only accelerated their plans. I do remember the Jem'Hadar being exicted about fighting Klingons and even knew about their signature weapon the bat'leth despite first contact being made prior to the Dominion traversing the wormhole. With how easy the Dominion took out a Galaxy class and how resistant it's ships were to type X phasers. It could be plausible the Dominion had been planning this war for decades if not centuries beforehand.
     
  14. Sykonee

    Sykonee Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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    I believe it was Wolfe who mentioned that in the DVD interviews, but it never was made explicit in the series that was the actual case. Still, an organization as large as the Federation would have drawn the attention of the Dominion at some point due to subspace communications or exploratory probes. The Feds would have at least been able to star chart the area near the wormhole for Sisko to identify the nearby star when he and Dax first go through.
     
  15. MacLeod

    MacLeod Admiral Admiral

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    They had using the Quadros One probe as stated in "Emissary"
     
  16. Edit_XYZ

    Edit_XYZ Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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    About the strength of the dominion:

    The last strategy of the dominion was to retreat behind the cardassian borders, increase jem'hadar/ship production, and, in ~2 years, when ready, to attack the federation/klingon/romulan alliance.

    Sisko's words for what would happen then were ~'God help us'.

    The dominion expeditionary force, in a mere 2 years, by using only cardassian resources, can become more than a match for the federation, klingons and romulans combined.

    What about the dominion proper - in 2000 years, by using the vastly larger resources of the gamma quadrant dominion?
    The federation, klingons and romulans are outmatched, by far.
     
  17. neozeks

    neozeks Captain Captain

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    Yes, I think Christopher somewhat exaggerated the bad position the Federation was in (I actually think DS9 is interesting in that it showed the good guys having a slight upper hand for a large part of the war) but that doesn't change his broader point. Your whole position hinges on the idea that the Dominion sent most of it forces into the AQ and that idea is simply illogical both from the perspective of what we know about the Founders and the perspective of simple strategic common sense. To sum it up: The Founders are hugely paranoid. The whole reason they set up the Dominion was to protect themselves. They have a huge territory in the GQ to control and protect from rebellion. They probably have neighbouring powers in the GQ that they consider a threat (for all we know, they might have been leading ten parallel wars of conquest in the GQ while "our" Dominion War was happening). Even if they had no current threats in the GQ, surely they had to consider the possibility of a new threat arising (to go for the classic example, a Borg attack). The Founders are risk averse, slow and methodical, long term thinking. With all that, the idea that they would send most of their military to a distant part of the galaxy to which they are connected only through a single choke point that can always disappear (however small that posibility might be), simply doesn't make sense.

    As for Dukat, I think he deluded himself into thinking the Dominion would have allowed the Cardassians to basically run the AQ territories and hugely increase their own power. And once the time was right, a few well placed internal sabotage actions (block the wormhole, take out the ketracel white supply) would have left the Cardassians in a position to challenge the Dominion forces in the AQ. All in his mind, of course. There's no way the Dominion would have allowed any of that.
     
  18. DWF

    DWF Admiral Admiral

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    Aside from a couple victories the Federation seemed to be losing the war forthe most part, which was why Sisko felt teh need to get the Romulans into the war on their side.
     
  19. Anwar

    Anwar Admiral Admiral

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    It wasn't just Cardassian resources, they brought lots and lots of stuff with them from the Gamma Quadrant to augment the place along with tons of ships.
     
  20. Edit_XYZ

    Edit_XYZ Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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    All of which are available to the gamma quadrant dominion in FAR greater abundance.