Well, two key differences pop into mind:
- The Feds have tanks and machine guns while the Cardassian war elephants are of an especially thin-skinned breed and their arrows have felt tips (the impotence of Cardassian weapons of war was established in "The Wounded").
- The Feds, having crossed the galactic ocean, have landed right next door to the Bajoran Fort, and only one day's march from the Cardassian High Palace (the first season of DS9 establishes the proximity of Bajor to Cardassia Prime and the absence of any Cardassian assets around or between those two locations).
Storming the Cardassian subcontinent shouldn't appear particularly laughable in the circumstances, especially as the United Kingdom of the Federation apparently also vastly outnumbers the Cardassian populance. In terms of analogies, it's more a case of choosing whether to annex Grenada or not (pretty much regardless of who's doing the choosing, the US or, say, Luxembourg).
There's another key difference that works in favor of Cardassia, though:
- The Cardassian subcontinent isn't internally divided into competing principalities: even the conquered worlds appear to be firmly under their central rule, their rebellious leanings of no tactical concern. And any territory "liberated" by the UFP in the old war remains hostile to the UFP rather than to Cardassia, as evidenced by all those "neutral" worlds surrounding Bajor in the first seasons.
Timo Saloniemi
- The Feds have tanks and machine guns while the Cardassian war elephants are of an especially thin-skinned breed and their arrows have felt tips (the impotence of Cardassian weapons of war was established in "The Wounded").
- The Feds, having crossed the galactic ocean, have landed right next door to the Bajoran Fort, and only one day's march from the Cardassian High Palace (the first season of DS9 establishes the proximity of Bajor to Cardassia Prime and the absence of any Cardassian assets around or between those two locations).
Storming the Cardassian subcontinent shouldn't appear particularly laughable in the circumstances, especially as the United Kingdom of the Federation apparently also vastly outnumbers the Cardassian populance. In terms of analogies, it's more a case of choosing whether to annex Grenada or not (pretty much regardless of who's doing the choosing, the US or, say, Luxembourg).
There's another key difference that works in favor of Cardassia, though:
- The Cardassian subcontinent isn't internally divided into competing principalities: even the conquered worlds appear to be firmly under their central rule, their rebellious leanings of no tactical concern. And any territory "liberated" by the UFP in the old war remains hostile to the UFP rather than to Cardassia, as evidenced by all those "neutral" worlds surrounding Bajor in the first seasons.
Timo Saloniemi