Withers
Captain
Either way you look at it, whether you think it was a bargain for going back to the Founders or whether you think it was because Odo was finally able to help her see the light (of which I do think there is evidence) the virus and thus Section 31's actions had no impact on ending the war and that is the point.
In further thinking on the idea of Section 31 I tried to play Devils Advocate.
What if Sisko wasn't able to prevent the Dominion Reinforcements from coming through the wormhole or the plot to trick the Romulans into the war had been exposed, causing them to join the Dominion? If the Federation was on the ropes, on the verge of outright annihilation, would the idea of the virus (or an action equally contrary to the ideals of the Federation) be excused in light of victory or even favored retrospectively as the shoulda-woulda-coulda 'option of last resort?'
The answer, unfortunately, is yes. If Section 31's illegal activities saved the Federation from destruction one of two adages would be used to justify said behaviors; 'the ends justify the means' and/or 'desperate times call for desperate measures.' Historically speaking those actions, while viewed as “wrong,” would ultimately be excused. A historical pardon, however, doesn't make it right and those excuses shouldn't be used as justification for abandoning the ideals the civilization everyone was fighting to save was based upon. Existence might be assured but the Federation, as it was, would have died along with whatever it was they destroyed in order to do so.
Starfleet has a knack for 'finding a way' to accomplish things. When faced with a dilemma one can count on the fact that Starfleet will find a way. Having a list of things they will never do (like commit a genocide) only means they'll have to work harder to come up with a solution. But they will come up with a solution under those circumstances. If there's some... “easy button” clause, of course everyone would have that in the back of their minds and so alternatives that may or may not work wouldn't be as fleshed out as they otherwise would have been. Limitations breed creative thinking.
There has to be a way of coexisting in the Universe with adversaries. By turning, (immediately based on the time period Odo was infected), to wiping out potential foes Section 31 robs Starfleet of the chance to use their abilities to figure out how.
No matter how I shake it Section 31 just isn't a good idea. There's no evidence that organization ever accomplished anything but tarnishing the image of humanity and further exemplifying the behavior that leads to greater hostility between powers in contrast to the primary mission of the Federation which is cooperation through diplomacy. Even if they had a tangible accomplishment somewhere along the lines condoning their methods would make those doing so accessories to the fact. Resorting to said methods robs the Federation of the experience of learning to better deal and coexist with hostile forces in the Universe.
The way I see it the only way something like Section 31 can exist under the Federation as we know it is just as it does; illegally.
If the Federation were constantly getting its ass kicked because of its refusal to “play dirty” I'd say a review of the policies under which it operated was in order. That, however, is not the case. There's no evidence that the “compromises” 31 was willing to make actually helped anything. If anything the evidence is to the contrary- that it in fact made the situation more precarious than it ever needed to be. Starfleet's “code” was the source of their strength not of their weakness. Ultimately cooperation won the war against the Dominion. I think that is an important thing to remember when one is talking about whether or not the 'Starfleet way' was a hindrance to victory.
In further thinking on the idea of Section 31 I tried to play Devils Advocate.
What if Sisko wasn't able to prevent the Dominion Reinforcements from coming through the wormhole or the plot to trick the Romulans into the war had been exposed, causing them to join the Dominion? If the Federation was on the ropes, on the verge of outright annihilation, would the idea of the virus (or an action equally contrary to the ideals of the Federation) be excused in light of victory or even favored retrospectively as the shoulda-woulda-coulda 'option of last resort?'
The answer, unfortunately, is yes. If Section 31's illegal activities saved the Federation from destruction one of two adages would be used to justify said behaviors; 'the ends justify the means' and/or 'desperate times call for desperate measures.' Historically speaking those actions, while viewed as “wrong,” would ultimately be excused. A historical pardon, however, doesn't make it right and those excuses shouldn't be used as justification for abandoning the ideals the civilization everyone was fighting to save was based upon. Existence might be assured but the Federation, as it was, would have died along with whatever it was they destroyed in order to do so.
Starfleet has a knack for 'finding a way' to accomplish things. When faced with a dilemma one can count on the fact that Starfleet will find a way. Having a list of things they will never do (like commit a genocide) only means they'll have to work harder to come up with a solution. But they will come up with a solution under those circumstances. If there's some... “easy button” clause, of course everyone would have that in the back of their minds and so alternatives that may or may not work wouldn't be as fleshed out as they otherwise would have been. Limitations breed creative thinking.
There has to be a way of coexisting in the Universe with adversaries. By turning, (immediately based on the time period Odo was infected), to wiping out potential foes Section 31 robs Starfleet of the chance to use their abilities to figure out how.
No matter how I shake it Section 31 just isn't a good idea. There's no evidence that organization ever accomplished anything but tarnishing the image of humanity and further exemplifying the behavior that leads to greater hostility between powers in contrast to the primary mission of the Federation which is cooperation through diplomacy. Even if they had a tangible accomplishment somewhere along the lines condoning their methods would make those doing so accessories to the fact. Resorting to said methods robs the Federation of the experience of learning to better deal and coexist with hostile forces in the Universe.
The way I see it the only way something like Section 31 can exist under the Federation as we know it is just as it does; illegally.
But--if that code results in the deaths of those lives a government is entrusted to protect--deaths which could have been prevented by "compromise"...should that moral code not be changed?
If the Federation were constantly getting its ass kicked because of its refusal to “play dirty” I'd say a review of the policies under which it operated was in order. That, however, is not the case. There's no evidence that the “compromises” 31 was willing to make actually helped anything. If anything the evidence is to the contrary- that it in fact made the situation more precarious than it ever needed to be. Starfleet's “code” was the source of their strength not of their weakness. Ultimately cooperation won the war against the Dominion. I think that is an important thing to remember when one is talking about whether or not the 'Starfleet way' was a hindrance to victory.
-Withers-