Since his people genetically engineered him as a weapon against the Borg to protect themselves.
Doesn't the prime directive only apply to non-warp capable cultures?
By the book meddling by Starfleet, the Prime Directive, may have applied. In the eyes of Icheb's parents he was a weapon to be used against the Borg to save their race.
I always thought the non-interference principal in the case of the Klingon Civil War was a completely separate matter from the Prime Directive, because during Picard's high-handed lectures, he tellingly did not specifically invoke the vaunted Prime Directive by name, as he was wont to do on so many other occasions.
I always figured the warp drive part was because up until the aliens develop warp drive a face-to-face encounter isn't likely.
Except with all the warp-capable civilizations whizzing around out there without Prime Directives, is that really a reasonable assumption? What's to stop the Klingons or Ferengi or Boslic or whoever from coming across a pre-warp planet and making contact with them, either for conquest or for trade? The Federation can only enforce the PD on its own people (and not even its own civilians if you believe TNG: "Angel One"), or protect pre-warp worlds within its territory. There are countless other starfarers out there who'd have no rules against making contact, so if anything it's rather implausible that there are so many uncontacted pre-warp worlds out there.
I guess it's as I said, though -- the real reason behind the PD that tends to get ignored isn't that the natives are "too primitive to understand" alien life, but that Starfleet officers could be tempted to think their superior advancement entitles them to play God and benevolently intervene to "help" the natives, with such help likely to go badly wrong because an outsider can't understand the natives' needs or values as well as they do. So maybe the reason for the ban on contacting pre-warp worlds is to ensure a level playing field, so that temptation to feel superior isn't as strong.
Warp drive is only defined as the line because once planets are warp capable they will meet other races anyway.
If they just showed up, saw a kid being sacrificed and interfered it would violate the prime directive. But the fact that they already became involved, and they would not have had the chance to sacrifice Icheb had Voyager not brought him back, removes that issue in this case.
Warp drive is only defined as the line because once planets are warp capable they will meet other races anyway.
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