^ ANY large ship like that would need a brig, wouldn't it? I mean, what if one of the *passengers* started trouble?
That may have been true when ENT started in 2151, but by the time of "Demons"/"Terra Prime," I think it's clear that the UESF had established itself as an essential organ of the UE government. I mean, they literally saved the Earth from its first existential threat. That's huge.
There is, of course, the flip side of this, that information eventually comes to light that the reason the Xindi attacked in the first place is because they believed Earth had something to do with the destruction of their future homeworld. The universe is already a weird enough place without time-traveling skinheads setting people up all the time, and in light of the whole Terra Prime issue a portion of the general public might decide to buffer itself from further participation on the interplanetary stage.
The terms of their joining the Federation would probably reflect both points of view. They wouldn't want to get rid of Starfleet, but they wouldn't want to be responsible if something went wrong either (as they nearly were in "Shockwave").
Interestingly:
In "Divergence"/"Affliction," Archer threatens Reed with a court-martial. I wonder if this means that UESF became a legal military after saving Earth from the Xindi?
If it did, it wasn't after the Xindi. Remember Archer's conversation with Hernandez in Home, where Archer recommends a MACO for her tactical officer and she tells him straight faced "I'm not sure how I'd feel about a military officer on the bridge." Hernandez seems to think this is cynical, DESPITE having read Archer's mission logs.
Because they didn't want to ABOLISH it, they just wanted to abdicate any political responsibility for maintaining it. Starfleet would cease to be a United Earth organization but would still be headquartered on Earth anyway.
Meanwhile, other Federation races also get to avoid the (it seems to them) problematic arrangement of having their space forces placed at the disposal of alien interests while laughing under their breath at how stupid the humans are for agreeing to such a daft arrangement.
Apart from the reasons mentioned above--certain political paranoia among member nations not wanting to accidentally create their own jailer--there's the fact that raising a whole starfleet from scratch would be incredibly expensive and time consuming. Federalizing an existing organization saved them the trouble of having to CREATE anything at all, they could simply build on what was already there and expand on it with the greater funding resources of the Federation government.
Anyway, that question is moot, because they clearly DIDN'T raise a Starfleet by themselves.
Whether Fed SF is a new organization or the adopted ESF, they obviously used the existing infrastructure that was already in place from the old organization anyway. They could have used the Vulcan space service, or the Andorian Royal Guard, or any number of much older and more advanced space forces in the universe, but they chose San Francisco and the United Earth Starfleet instead.
But even in that "other" sense, charters don't establish an organization's EXISTENCE.
Interestingly, Earth Starfleet doesn't seem to have that authority. They're authorized to engage in espionage to the point of breaking interstellar law and/or treaties, but even sent against the Xindi their mission was primarily to FIND the Xindi and figure out what the hell they were on about (and then only because Archer had clued Starfleet in to the fact that some time traveling weirdness was afoot).
Linear warp drives, phasers, photon torpedoes, transporters (apparently), linguicode translators, security forcefields, widespread use of navigational deflectors. And though not exactly an example of "technology," it's clear that Earth-based design conventions continue to dominate even in the Federation Starfleet.
Indeed it could, though again, the organization the charter applies to has to exist before the charter is assigned. That's the significance of referencing a Constitution: a government of sorts must exist to ratify it in the first place. You can't just write a constitution and then announce "We've got a document now, so we'd better get some guys together and start governing shit."
Of course, the United States WAS the United States under the Articles of Confederation and didn't become a brand new country when the Constitution was written;
Except that they still built provisions into the Articles that severely limited Federal powerFor the same reason the founding worlds of the Federation would have ratified the Articles of the Federation -- because the war taught them that they needed one-another and needed to trust one-another. There's nothing irrational about ratifying the Articles of Confederation during the Revolutionary War.
Yes, and North Korea is a Democratic Republic, it says so on the label. A political organization can refer to itself by any term(s) it wishes, simply because the Federation refers to itself by that term does not mean it is in fact one.Which would be fine if we were talking about the creation of a confederation, but this is a federation we're talking about. It says so on the label.
While I'm not sure this is the way it happen, there would be obvious cost advantages to transferring an intact organization from say Earth, over to the federation. Not just ships and bases, but also intact maintenance organizations, training schools and associated bureaucracies. All you would have to do is change the insignia and provide your people with some instruction. Your people would be "all up." The disorganization of creating a brand new Starfleet would be avoided. Fully integration of the Federation's multiple member's military contributions into a single whole could come later, if at all.Would it really be any less expensive to do that than simply establishing an independent Federation Starfleet and then ...
While suggestive of a direct connection owing the common year of founding, Starfleet academy (founded in 2161) very well could have originated as a United Earth Starfleet service academy and only later begun a association with the Federation. Or it could have train personnel for both Starfleets . American military academies train officers from multiple countries, not just America's officers.the Federation Starfleet Academy was founded in 2161, the same year as the Federation.
And to many people in this land that still is the case, perhaps increasingly so these days.When someone said, "My country," back then, they meant Massachusetts or Virginia or Pennsylvania or what-have-you, not America.
From the Declaration of Independence:" We, therefore, the Representatives of the United States of America, in General Congress ..."
Never said anything about Xenophobia. To a certain point it's clear that humans both accept and embrace aliens on a PERSONAL level, but seem collectively weary to open up to them on a POLITICAL level. It is thus that Earth must obviously have a very strict immigration code to keep fast-talking cretins like Quark or maladjusted refugees like Ro Laren from moving in and dragging down the neighborhood. That was my point about it being a very enlightened gated community: they like aliens just fine, and they're willing to do business with them under any number of circumstances, but only as long as there are no obligations or permanent attachments.Seems to me that the course of the war must have turned public opinion in favor of greater interstellar involvement and multilateralism. We're looking at the founding of the Federation being the result of the end of that kind of xenophobia, not the product of it.
You go from "I'm not comfortable with a military officer on the bridge" to "I'm a military officer" in just eight months? That would be one HELL of a change."Home" is set some time prior to 17 May 2154 (when "Borderland," the next episode, is set). "Affliction"/"Divergence" is set in December 2154. That's plenty of time for things to have changed.
To be sure, they've been responsible for advances FOR SPACE EXPLORATION. It is not clear what if any benefit Starfleet actually provided Earth technologically, other than weapons technology and their timely resolution of the Xindi crisis. It's very possible--and indeed, very likely--that most of those technologies were actually obtained in trade by the Cargo Service and then forwarded to Starfleet in turn. Starfleet certainly didn't get those technologies from the Vulcans, but other aliens along the Terran trade routes might not have any compunctions about trading, say, dilithium crystals and krelide power cells for a couple hundred gallons of rainbow sherbert.That still seems utterly implausible to me -- the UESF has clearly been responsible for far too many advances for Earth for the idea that they'd want to toss it away to make any sense.
Legality only defines an organization when that organization is established by precedent. Starfleet is not, therefore transfer of ownership--if you could even call it that--is irrelevant.But setting that issue aside, I'm not convinced that it would remain legally the same organization upon such a transfer of ownership.
The Federation was BASED on trust, that doesn't mean it always enjoyed that trust. It did not--and COULD not--have formed overnight, nor could it have existed as a perfect union from the moment of its inception. The universe just doesn't work that way.I'm not saying your scenario is impossible -- it's not. But to me, it seems both implausible (it seems to contradict the very ideas of unity, fairness, and trust the Federation is supposed to have been based upon), and lacking in evidence.
No, it's merely to answer YOUR supposition that other federation members would never allow a single race to have its space service federalized at their collective expense. To reiterate: a major reason why they WOULD is because of their mutual suspicion of one another even as Federation members, and having Earth Starfleet function on behalf of the Federation would seem like a safe bet since Earth had never openly antagonized any of them (or at least, had always antagonized all of them equally).And it's all there to support the idea that the UESF and the Federation Starfleet are the same organization
No. For the simple reason that you would also have to rearrange command organizations and infrastructure for all of those other organizations to make them subordinate to Starfleet Headquarters in San Francisco; and that's just the organizational angle. Compatability issues between human-built space craft and computers are already a headache for designers... now try developing datalink protocols that will be compatible with five different SPECIES, some of whom were actually at war with each other just a couple of years earlier. And don't even get me started on the logistics aspects; so all the Earth starships are using verterium cortenide in the warp coils, but the Andorians use monosilicate verterium, the vulcans use isometric neutronium and the tellarites use a solution of molten trilithium and powdered sugar.Would it really be any less expensive to do that than simply establishing an independent Federation Starfleet and then having the Member States' space forces -- the United Earth Starfleet, the Andorian Imperial Guard, the Vulcan Space Service, etc. -- transfer ownership of a certain percentage of vessels and bases to the Federation Starfleet, and giving FSF commissions to a certain percentage of the space forces' personnel?
Unless the U.N. Charter materialized out of thin air on a pair of stone tablets, this is self-contradictory. The United Nations was created by a collection of countries working on concert, coordinating with each other to establish the powers and responsibilities of the new organization. Insofar as the drafting of a charter requires a certain amount of organization to begin with, the U.N. came to exist the moment its founding nations got together and decided to create it.Sure they do. The United Nations did not exist until its charter was ratified by the requisite number of states, for instance.
Enterprise' mission WAS explicitly stated on screen. Fighting a war against the Xindi wasn't part of it, nor was Enterprise given a concrete military objective. They WERE directed to find and neutralize the Xindi superweapon, for sure, but it was directly implied at every point that Archer's mission was to CONTACT the Xindi and try to find a way to dissuade them from using the weapon in the first place.Oh, c'mon. They equipped the NX-01 with all sorts of new weapons before the Xindi mission, and they stuck the MACOs aboard. It's pretty obvious that they were expected to try to neutralize any threats to Earth they encountered, even if it wasn't explicitly stated onscreen.
And the saucer module, and the overall ship configuration, and the weapons and sensors involved, and communications technology. Neither Vulcan nor Andorian designs appear to have anything in common with Starfleet's 23rd century designs, and a somewhat tenuous resemblance to 24th century vessels.I don't think that's clear at all. It's clear that there's some visual continuity between, say, the NX-01's and Constitution-class's warp nacelles
It wasn't.for all we know, the transporter might have been based on an Andorian design
Phase weapons were introduced before Starfleet had any extensive dealings with the Tellarites; the weapons on NX-01 were described as "prototypes."the phasers may have been of Tellarite design
No, it was the Klingons. The design was apparently borrowed from one of their computers when Enterprise boarded their ship in "sleeping dogs."the Vulcans may have been the ones who finally figured out how to do photon torpedoes, etc.
Says the British Government in 1783, which formally recognized--BY NAME--the independent thirteen colonies as "The United States of America." Six years, mind you, before the Constitution was ratified, at a time when the United States was still being governed by the Articles of Confederation.Oh? Says who?
The British Government disagrees with you. And incidentally, so does every historian in the western world.The Confederation that existed under the Articles was a separate institution entirely, and could hardly qualify as a government -- it didn't even have the power to levy taxes!
You think a group of planetwide civilizations who have been independent and sovereign for thousands of years are going to give up their sovereignty and form a massive Federal state in the span of less than a decade? The colonies were only independent for SEVEN YEARS, and even under the Constitution continued to enjoy a huge measure of autonomy until the conclusion of the Civil War. The U.S. Government has been making a slow evolution from a collection of sovereign colonies to a unified nation for nearly two centuries, and this in a country whose founding colonies are mainly populated by the same cultural/ethnic group.The whole point of the Federation, on the other hand, is that they would by definition have not needed to go through those steps. They had already been independent worlds for centuries, and they would already have had an alliance amongst themselves in the form of the Coalition of Planets. Thus, there would have been no need for a second middle step in creating the Federation.
On a certain level this is true.You're right. Slight hyperbole. I should have said, "Usually behave rationally." Which they do. Know why? Because they form their policies to please their constituents and thereby stay in office. That's rational, once you understand their fundamental premises.
Says the British Government in 1783, which formally recognized--BY NAME--the independent thirteen colonies as "The United States of America." Six years, mind you, before the Constitution was ratified, at a time when the United States was still being governed by the Articles of Confederation.
Never said anything about Xenophobia. To a certain point it's clear that humans both accept and embrace aliens on a PERSONAL level, but seem collectively weary to open up to them on a POLITICAL level. It is thus that Earth must obviously have a very strict immigration code to keep fast-talking cretins like Quark or maladjusted refugees like Ro Laren from moving in and dragging down the neighborhood.
I'd say that last one is a MASSIVE benefit. Saving the planet and all.To be sure, they've been responsible for advances FOR SPACE EXPLORATION. It is not clear what if any benefit Starfleet actually provided Earth technologically, other than weapons technology and their timely resolution of the Xindi crisis.
Now this I do agree with. I would say that despite it's name, the Federation was indeed a very loose alliance/union/confederation at the start and posibly well into the 23rd century. But slowly with time, and certainly by the 24th century, it turned into a full-fledged federation (although with some relicts from it's confederation days). I think this is the most realistic process, one for which we have historical and even present evidence with the evolution of the USA and the EU. How this affects Starfleet, I'll get to in a minute.The Federation was BASED on trust, that doesn't mean it always enjoyed that trust. It did not--and COULD not--have formed overnight, nor could it have existed as a perfect union from the moment of its inception. The universe just doesn't work that way.
But how can they sure that will hold for the future? If they are so suspicious, wouldn't they also suspect humans would use such a setup to benefit themselves at the detriment of other members? OTOH, frankly, I don't think human themselves would be fine with placing their space force under alien command, without the others doing the same. Just like I don't think Luxembourg would be fine in your example. The other members can outvote Earth in the Councill, can they not?To reiterate: a major reason why they WOULD is because of their mutual suspicion of one another even as Federation members, and having Earth Starfleet function on behalf of the Federation would seem like a safe bet since Earth had never openly antagonized any of them (or at least, had always antagonized all of them equally).
How about all the members combining their technical knowledge to define common Federation specifications that use the best of all their various technologies, regardless of who invented what? In a way, isn't that what the Federation is all about?Are you going to outfit Earth shipyards to be able to service all four of those different engine types? Or Andoria's? Or Vulcan's? Or are you eventually going to use Federation law requiring Andorians to build ships to (formerly) Earth Starfleet specifications so that all fleets can use the same parts built by the same assembly lines for commonality?
You yourself raised the point about punctuation being important... did you not notice that the "United States" is capitalized in the treaty?He doesn't acknowledge the United States to be a free, sovereign, and independent state. He acknowledges each of the states, separately and uniquely, as such.
The thing is, Starfleet is not Earth's military in the 22nd century, the MACOs are. Starfleet is a highly prestigious space service with a very glorious reputation, but having Starfleet under Federal control is not like having its Army Navy and Air Force under U.N. control. It would, in fact, be a bit like the U.S. government trying to privatize NASA. Stoked as we are about how awesome the Shuttle is and how we managed to land on the moon some years ago, there are even some at NASA who thought this would be a good idea.But how can they sure that will hold for the future? If they are so suspicious, wouldn't they also suspect humans would use such a setup to benefit themselves at the detriment of other members? OTOH, frankly, I don't think human themselves would be fine with placing their space force under alien command, without the others doing the same. Just like I don't think Luxembourg would be fine in your example. The other members can outvote Earth in the Councill, can they not?To reiterate: a major reason why they WOULD is because of their mutual suspicion of one another even as Federation members, and having Earth Starfleet function on behalf of the Federation would seem like a safe bet since Earth had never openly antagonized any of them (or at least, had always antagonized all of them equally).
Sure, but again, that would take a great deal of time. On the order of DECADES, in fact, assuming everyone made a genuine effort to do so, and in the early days of the Federation it's doubtful everyone would.How about all the members combining their technical knowledge to define common Federation specifications that use the best of all their various technologies, regardless of who invented what? In a way, isn't that what the Federation is all about?Are you going to outfit Earth shipyards to be able to service all four of those different engine types? Or Andoria's? Or Vulcan's? Or are you eventually going to use Federation law requiring Andorians to build ships to (formerly) Earth Starfleet specifications so that all fleets can use the same parts built by the same assembly lines for commonality?
For the most part this makes sense, except I could see Earth Starfleet--now under Federation control--being the one performing these experiments. It wouldn't have been a military organization even then and would still have been the exploratory/research arm of the Federation, at a time when no other Federation world actually HAD a dedicated exploration arm with Starfleet's MO (i.e. a very well organized civilian agency that, despite not actually being part of any military command, manages to be well armed and fairly effective in dangerous situations).At the very start, the FSF was just a small-ish experiment in integration. Every species transfered a few of the most suitable ships and a portion of it's personnel. Starfleet Academy was formed to train these people to work together. Combined engineering teams under the FSF umbrella started devising common technical specifications and norms and using those to design new ships to be built for the new fledgling force. Other parts of the new Starfleet started work on common communications, medical, etc. protocols. Experience from the Romulan War, where the various space forces had to work closely, provided the foundation to build on. Humans provided most input, thanks to their general neutrality but also because I have a theory that United Earth actually came out of the war in a similar position to the USA after WW2 - their forces hugely increased, their allies' forces diminished. And also because humans were technologically the most backwards species, so integration skills were the most valuable thing they could provide to the new force. This new force served only under the Federation Councill's command.
You yourself raised the point about punctuation being important...He doesn't acknowledge the United States to be a free, sovereign, and independent state. He acknowledges each of the states, separately and uniquely, as such.
did you not notice that the "United States" is capitalized in the treaty?
The thing is, Starfleet is not Earth's military in the 22nd century, the MACOs are.
If MACOs were where the real space military might of Earth was, wouldn't they get mentioned here?MALIK: When the High Council hears that humans have decimated their colony, they'll launch a counterstrike. The Klingons will keep Starfleet busy for years.
I think it would be more like the US giving NASA over to the UN. Tough chance of that happening.It would, in fact, be a bit like the U.S. government trying to privatize NASA.
It could take a decade or two to start giving full results, yeah. But that seems like a reasonable time period to me.Sure, but again, that would take a great deal of time. On the order of DECADES, in fact, assuming everyone made a genuine effort to do so, and in the early days of the Federation it's doubtful everyone would.
Well, we can only talk about TOS here and we've rarely seen Starfleet outside Enterprise in it. Even then, we have that Vulcan-manned Starfleet ship (Intrepid, was it?).the other world's space forces did not make much of a visible contribution to Starfleet until about the 24th century.
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If MACOs were where the real space military might of Earth was, wouldn't they get mentioned here?MALIK: When the High Council hears that humans have decimated their colony, they'll launch a counterstrike. The Klingons will keep Starfleet busy for years.
Incorrect. BOTH times we saw Earth cargo ships in ENT they were engaged in combat against alien pirates. Not that we should expect otherwise, because during the 22nd century there were really only two kinds of people in any position to fight with aliens: the crew of NX-01, and the Earth Cargo Service.The thing is, Starfleet is not Earth's military in the 22nd century, the MACOs are.
That may be true for the first two seasons of ENT but it's highly debatable for the other two, especially the last season. Even if it's not legally a military, I think it can be succesfully argued that it's clear Starfleet is the de facto space military of United Earth by that point. Whenever we've seen an Earth ship doing combat it was a Starfleet ship.
Because the MACOS weren't the ones chasing him.Whenever a military crisis happened, Starfleet was the only one involved. Then there's this bit from the Augment arc:
If MACOs were where the real space military might of Earth was, wouldn't they get mentioned here?MALIK: When the High Council hears that humans have decimated their colony, they'll launch a counterstrike. The Klingons will keep Starfleet busy for years.
Do Vulcans commonly give their ships names like "Intrepid?" If not, that would seem to be an Earth vessel manned by Vulcans for some specific mission.Well, we can only talk about TOS here and we've rarely seen Starfleet outside Enterprise in it. Even then, we have that Vulcan-manned Starfleet ship (Intrepid, was it?).the other world's space forces did not make much of a visible contribution to Starfleet until about the 24th century.
Incorrect. BOTH times we saw Earth cargo ships in ENT they were engaged in combat against alien pirates. Not that we should expect otherwise, because during the 22nd century there were really only two kinds of people in any position to fight with aliens: the crew of NX-01, and the Earth Cargo Service.
Which shows Starfleet is more important to Earth's security than them. Though, of course, there was a MACO team onboard Enterprise.Because the MACOS weren't the ones chasing him.
It does seem strange that when other Vulcan ships appeared on the show they possessed Vulcan names, but not the Intrepid. Which on the surface would suggest that it wasn't a Vulcan ship regardless of it's crew composition. Saying that Starfleet and later the Enterprise's own crew were simply translating the Vulcan name into English seems unlikely.
And yet even in "The Expanse," this takes place several days before our first overt reference to Starfleet NOT being a military organization, later in that very same episode. And even after all the shit Archer had to go through with the Xindi, we STILL have Ericka's quote from "Home" the following season that continues to differentiate the two, this at a time when Enterprise has already been upgraded with double its original armament and Columbia was outfitted with that armament from the start. We seem to have come full circle again...Incorrect. BOTH times we saw Earth cargo ships in ENT they were engaged in combat against alien pirates. Not that we should expect otherwise, because during the 22nd century there were really only two kinds of people in any position to fight with aliens: the crew of NX-01, and the Earth Cargo Service.
My bad, I should have said Earth government ships. Like the Starfleet ships figthing off the Klingons in The Expanse, the ones leading the rag-tag fleet in Twilight or Columbia fighting the Klingons in the Augment arc.
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