Vulcan had no reason to send a distress call about seismic disturbances when no drilling was causing those yet. Nero OTOH had every reason to lure all the remaining local starships to their doom, so that he wouldn't have to face them in a situation where they would stand against him in battle readiness.How did Nero fool the cadet ships? If you're implying that he was the one who faked the distress call, that makes no sense whatsoever. Why would he do such a thing? He only wants to destroy Vulcan while Spock Prime watches from Delta Vega as revenge. Nero has no interest whatsoever in luring 8 ships to Vulcan just to destroy them too. Obviously the distress call came from Vulcan.
Nero doesn't just want to destroy Vulcan: his stated aim is to die doing maximal damage to the Federation, as he soon demonstrates by attempting to destroy Earth. Diverting Starfleet is a necessary (but, alas, not successful) element there, and well within Nero's means. That he does it once is good indication that he did it twice.
But we know this did not happen. Starfleet had no information about any sort of an attack against Vulcan when it sent the cadet fleet. Instead, it had this incorrect, falsified information about seismic disturbances, apparently tailored so that not just the wet-behind-the-antennae cadets but also the veteran Admirals were fooled into believing in a natural disaster.Again, we have no idea what the Narada was doing before it started drilling. It could have been taking out Vulcan's orbital and planetary defenses. That would give Vulcan plenty of time to send out their distress call before Nero even started up his drill.
We know that destroying starships is the opposite of easy for Nero. Twice a single undercrewed starship defeats him, despite Nero getting in a whole lot of sucker punches first - the Kelvin and the Enterprise both triumph, stopping Nero in his tracks.And even if Nero was responsible, why would he make such a lure? If destroying those 8 ships over Vulcan was that easy, then he would have just destroyed the rest of the fleet
Clearly, the success on Vulcan orbit requires extraordinary rationalization, then. And happily, it's something we did not see happen, as opposed to Nero's onscreen defeat by single starships. So we better appeal to Nero's two known weapons: information warfare, red matter, and a fanatical devotion to doing the same thing over and over again...
Similarly, we never saw that 47:1 fight happen. The easiest explanation is that it never did. The second-easiest is that Nero used cunning disinformation tricks and red matter traps, neither of which were available to him in the two onscreen fights where he lost to single ships. But it's one hell of a task to try and invent a way for Nero to defeat those 47 ships in a "fair fight", given all the actual evidence.
No. Nero never "admitted" anything about red matter or the abduction and torturing of Starfleet officers to any of the above, even though both were elemental to his plans, actions and triumphs.Nero also never admitted he had done anything of the sort, and he is most definitely the type of person who would admit such a thing to Kirk, Spock, Pike, or anyone the first chance he got.
Timo Saloniemi