or this planetary destruction you speak of when looked at the wrong way, for example.
Both Kirk and Sisko readily chose orbital bombardment when a way of life on a human or sorta-human settlement did not appeal to them, even though no known crimes had been committed by those victimized. Again, the actions in about one TOS episode in four, or in DS9 "For the Uniform", were considered acceptable or at least clearly did not hinder the careers of the bombers.
The portrayal of Starfleet as a militaristic organization easily goes unnoticed, but it really is the obvious thing to look for - the heroes are killers by profession, after all. It's just not pronouncedly fascist or communist or Prussian or Hun militarism, but its own Technicolor variant, perhaps somewhat confusing the issue.
Timo Saloniemi
Well, as to your estimation of the number of TOS episodes that featured what your describing, I will just page through them sequentially and see if I can find the type of action you mention in approximately 20, as your calculation suggests. I can't see how I will find such examples, but will name those that I do to see if they agree with your qualifications.
I believe we just had a thread that questioned the nature of Starfleet's role, as essentially military or exploratory. I believe a majority of posters offered the former or at least that it was an unarguable facet of its mission, either in defense of Federation members or offensively against incontrovertible threats. Now you are using the word militaristic, which puts
somewhat of a different spin on it, especially in the description of its members as killers by profession. Are you saying then that the preponderance of training that is focused on at the Academy revolves around the application of the art of the war, to the vast exclusion of any other pursuits? That would seem to be the case, if killing is in fact
the profession that its graduates are being prepared for.
Would you not concede that the vast majority of Starfleet personnel have never taken the lives of others? Are they to be considered failures then, or just the cohort being held in reserve to replace the murderers when their ranks are endangered by attrition? Honestly, such a characterization seems to beggar credulity, IMO.