Look at recruitment ads for the U.S. military services. Most stress humanitarian purposes and keeping peace and order in lawless areas. But we all know what the military really exists for, even those joining it know it.
It looks to me as if Starfleet morphed into something that more openly (and sincerely) took on humanitarian and scientific purposes. At the end of the day, it's military and the first line of defense, but most of its mission (it's day-to-day reason to be) is peaceful. Pike probably described it best in ST09. It's a "peacekeeping and humanitarian armada."
As a piece of fiction, I think part of the debate among those who produced "Star Trek" down through the years was the degree to which military decorum would be followed in this hybrid service. Whether it would be something like the Meyer way, or the early TNG way. It seems both extremes have brought criticism from fans.
On topic, I won't draw conclusions from an early draft of anyone's work, especially a review of it. That's not entirely fair. That said, it has always seemed that Axanar was going to be a big war picture whatever the final form took. It makes me think of a smaller version of Jendresen's "Star Trek" idea.
It looks to me as if Starfleet morphed into something that more openly (and sincerely) took on humanitarian and scientific purposes. At the end of the day, it's military and the first line of defense, but most of its mission (it's day-to-day reason to be) is peaceful. Pike probably described it best in ST09. It's a "peacekeeping and humanitarian armada."
As a piece of fiction, I think part of the debate among those who produced "Star Trek" down through the years was the degree to which military decorum would be followed in this hybrid service. Whether it would be something like the Meyer way, or the early TNG way. It seems both extremes have brought criticism from fans.
On topic, I won't draw conclusions from an early draft of anyone's work, especially a review of it. That's not entirely fair. That said, it has always seemed that Axanar was going to be a big war picture whatever the final form took. It makes me think of a smaller version of Jendresen's "Star Trek" idea.