No more feared or formidable than Nazi Germany - we are talking the force that had just conquered the whole of Western Europe in about three months seemingly effortlessly - seems pretty Borg-like to me.In First Contact however, it was the Borg.
Historically actually the Germans would have been highly unlikely to pull off an invasion, though this was not understood at the time.To illustrate; this is as if the Germans sent every single last tank, soldier, ship, u-boat, and plane they had toward the Britain across the Channel, and then Britain deciding to not redeploy and send only their - relatively speaking - handfuls of planes and soldiers stationed at that border against all those massive numbers.
However, as in any military campaign, the resources you have need to be husbanded and well deployed. While there are always occasions when everything you have is engaged you don't just simply throw everything you have at a single target. If you did, the Borg would just send two ships and have one turn up a few hours later, they win.
No, they would not. Apart from anything else how many starships can actually wheel around in that space around a cube? Given the short range at which combat seems to take place (one must assume at longer ranges the weapons are ineffective or something) no more than a couple fo dozen ships can engae at any one time.The Federation would have thrown everything they could get back in time at the Borg.
I'd have sent groups of 25 starships in waves, to break off when they started to lose shields and be replaced by another wave. Maybe 200 odd ships in total, but it is hard to believe Starfleet would send everything they had. Things just do not work that way.
Are you crazy? One could hurt the Nazi war machine. You can NOT hurt the Borg.
Actually he would have won, if he had invaded Britain, he just never did.
He though the British would join him on their own because "they donated the money needed for him to come to power."
And if you didn't, the first cube will assimilate the Federation on its own. It's nice that you want to have something in reserve for a second engagement, reality however is, that there won't BE a second engagement, if you do not win the first one!
So you commit everything, and hope the Borg don't have another cube right behind the first one, or nobody around you makes use of your weakness.
No, not 200 ships, those 200 ships would be destroyed less then fifteen minutes into the battle. There would be many, many, many more. Everything essentially.
Janeway whooped them dozens of times - you just have to know HOW to hurt them
An invasion of Britain in 1940 was borderline impossible and in any circumstances horrifically risky
There would be many, many, many more. Everything essentially.
Which is how most of Hitler's victories went... He'd do an insane operation in a stupid way, and lose key assets in doing so, but would emerge as the clear victor and gain a disproportionate reputation.
Janeway whooped them dozens of times
Nope - on-screen evidence from Voyager suggests that a single cube facing the Starfleet of the FC era is not a totally indestructable force.
Or you do what real military commanders do and commit a balanced force to effectively meet the enemy with local superiority like real commanders do.
So Starfleet lost thousands of ships in that battle? Why? Surely unless you have a death wish you wait until your shields are weakening, break off, recharge them, then go back into the fight.
Why was it so hard for the BORG to assimilate the Earth, it was so hard that the Queen needed to find unconventional methods of assimilation to get the job done. That had assilimated many other world probably just as large and advanced as earth, so why the problem. With the Transwarp Hubs they could get here with no problem, there were more than enought Cubes to do it, so why did have such a problem??
Are you crazy? One could hurt the Nazi war machine. You can NOT hurt the Borg.
Janeway whooped them dozens of times - you just have to know HOW to hurt them, the same essentially applies to both I'm afraid!
On screen evidence from Voyager suggest they can't do a thing.Nope - on-screen evidence from Voyager suggests
On screen evidence from FC "suggests", it WAS and indestructible force, if it weren't for a fortunate feedback loop their energy grid that Picard through his connection with the Borg could capitalize on.that a single cube facing the Starfleet of the FC era is not a totally indestructable force.
Exactly, which means when you face something like the Borg, you bring it ALL, or you LOSE. Against the Borg, that's the ONLY viable "careful deployment of forces and reserves" that might - and that's indeed a BIG might - allow you to win.Is there a single real-world example of any military commander doing such a thing and winning? You cannot win any battle without careful deployment of forces and reserves.
Real world military commanders have never had to face with foreknowledge something as unstoppable as the Borg. Now, don't get me wrong, there have been military commanders facing something as relatively unstoppable as the Borg without foreknowledge, they all did what you're suggested; they all lost, their civilizations wiped from the pages of history.Or you do what real military commanders do and commit a balanced force to effectively meet the enemy with local superiority like real commanders do.So you commit everything, and hope the Borg don't have another cube right behind the first one, or nobody around you makes use of your weakness.
So Starfleet lost thousands of ships in that battle? Why? Surely unless you have a death wish you wait until your shields are weakening, break off, recharge them, then go back into the fight. A balanced hit and run strategy is very effective against large targets in historal naval combat as you use your manoeuverability to counter the enemy's superior firepower (like a Destroyer attack on a Battleship).No, not 200 ships, those 200 ships would be destroyed less then fifteen minutes into the battle. There would be many, many, many more. Everything essentially.
Your strategy seems to involve a lot of rather unnecessary risk and loss for Starfleet.
Did you watch First Contact? You did notice that transmission right? Where 2 seconds into the battle you hear ships being torn to shreds by internal explosions, and less then 30 seconds into the battle they requested reinforcements?
Good one, that one's funny. Did you watch First Contact? You did notice that transmission right? Where 2 seconds into the battle you hear ships being torn to shreds by internal explosions, and less then 30 seconds into the battle they requested reinforcements?
Against the Borg; especially if they wish to destroy your ships instead of keeping them mostly intact to assimilate them, there is no such thing as "waiting until your shields are weakening", there is only exploding ships.
The USS Voyager engaged in combat with Borg vessels in "Drone," "Dark Frontier, Parts I & II," "Collective," "Child's Play," "Unimatrix Zero, Parts I & II," and "Endgame, Part II." In only two -- arguably three -- of these episodes, "Dark Frontier, Part I," "Child's Play," and "Dark Frontier, Part II" (the arguable case) does Voyager defeat a Borg vessel in combat without an unusual advantage.
...loads of stuff about Voyager...
No, it does not. On-screen evidence from VOY makes it clear that a single, fully-manned Borg cube could easily defeat scores of Federation starships unless they are equipped with 25th Century technology (or Picard senses yet another Achilles Heel).
Again, your analogy is specious. You might as well talk about the Roman Navy trying to defeat the USS Abraham Lincoln.
1) The Borg have typically been able to penetrate deflector shields and to incapacitate propulsion systems far too quickly for that tactic to work
The USS Voyager engaged in combat with Borg vessels in "Drone," "Dark Frontier, Parts I & II," "Collective," "Child's Play," "Unimatrix Zero, Parts I & II," and "Endgame, Part II." In only two -- arguably three -- of these episodes, "Dark Frontier, Part I," "Child's Play," and "Dark Frontier, Part II" (the arguable case) does Voyager defeat a Borg vessel in combat without an unusual advantage.
So one medium sized starship without support defeated this unstoppable enemy three times?
...loads of stuff about Voyager...
I appreciate all the examples but it sounds to me like one ship dealt qwith the Borg quite effectively in Voyager, by your own examples.
Starfleet seem to do quite well against the Borg.
I am really grateful posters here are not in command of any real military forces. Very few well run battles are won by everyone piling in and the side with the biggest force winning - in fact the opposite is often true, Battle Of France for example.
Again, your analogy is specious. You might as well talk about the Roman Navy trying to defeat the USS Abraham Lincoln.
No
1) The Borg have typically been able to penetrate deflector shields and to incapacitate propulsion systems far too quickly for that tactic to work
Well that does not seem to be the situation in FC to me - I got the impression of a costly hit-and-run battle but still a hit-and-run battle, where Starfleet kept up the pressure and sure lost ships which got caught in the tractor beams or smacked by big green blobs, but also did massive damage to the Borg, Picard delivered an effective coup-de-grace but the outcome did not seem to be in doubt.
...Same stuff sci posted before posted again...
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