Trouble is, we've rarely if ever seen starships ACTUALLY DO this.
"The Die is Cast"
We know they're capable of orbital bombardment, but there must be some in-universe reason why this isn't usually a viable tactic in wartime. I would think that ground based shielding (of the type Soran was using in Generations) would more than suffice to hold off most orbital attacks in the short term, while purpose-built bunkers would suffice over longer seiges. Major cities would have even stronger shields, and either military facilities or population centers would be surrounded by DS9-style weapon emplacements.
Now, the aforementioned orbital bombardment seen in the DS9 ep mentioned above is but ONE instance of planetary bombardment by starships. I pointed it out because you dismissed it as something we've "rarely if ever" seen, then as a counter-point, you assume that something we have seen an equal number of times (once) - Soran's huge-ass forcefield - would be standard fare around the Trek verse. Then you assume that a bunch of things we've NEVER seen (unless I am forgetting something) are
also standard fare.
If those things "could" be standard fare and we just never heard about it, there also "could" have been plenty of times that warring powers used starships to attack planetside
armed forces and we just never heard about it.
The Romulans, by the way, were so certain of this that they were willing to risk a war with the Federation to land a few thousand troops on Vulcan. As with law, possession is nine tenths of victory.
This is nothing more than a massive plot hole. "Over 2000" Romulan troops isn't enough to accomplish anything toward the ultimate goal of taking over an entire planet (a core Federation world, no less).
I guess the MACOs don't count, then?
I can't speak for anyone else, but on this point, my concern is with the lack of even a teeny tiny shred of evidence
within TOS-VOY and the first ten movies that any
Federation (not "Earth") military (or even military-ish) force exists aside from Starfleet. So, no, the MACOs
don't count.
As to the question of why the resistance...
Anyone else want to speak to why we resist the thought of StarFleet as military ASIDE from our evidence pro or con from the series/movies?
Nothing comes to mind, other than the general sense that "military" is a gross oversimplification of what Starfleet is.
Perhaps you are grossly oversimplifying what the military is.
This. What reason is there to assume that by "the military", one MUST mean "the body that is concerned only with fighting the wars"? Starfleet fights the Federation's wars when necessary; therefore, they are the military. However, they are also an organization dedicated to the peaceful exploration of the galaxy, to seeking out new life and learning about it, and to advancing Federation science, and still other things too.
One does not preclude the other. Speaking of which:
Based on the preponderance of the evidence (all eps and movies), is the PRIMARY mission of starfleet . . .
a. to fight and win the federation's wars (language taken from our US Army mission statement)
or
b. exploration
Remember: "Primary" mission. Which do you think it is? I'm curious.
That depends somewhat on what you mean. If you mean that if a choice has to be made to do one or the other, then I would definitely say that defense is going to be the primary mission, because I doubt a Starfleet ship would just go off and do some random exploration if there was a ship or planet that was under attack. This is how the
Enterprise-C was lost, and it wasn't even in defense of a Federation colony, but that of an ally.
Good example with the Ent-C.
I don't think it can be disputed that Starfleet's ships and personnel drop what they are doing and run to assist if Federation citizens, other Starfleet personnel, or the UFP as a whole, are threatened.
newtype, you tried to make a point upthread (in response to asking "Wouldn't Starfleet prioritize a military mission where lives where at stake above an exploratory mission?") with this:
Again, it depends on the nature of the threat. Starfleet will ALWAYS redirect to a different mission when lives are at stake, even if it means putting off a military mission (which they arguably did in Angel One).
I don't see how prioritizing a situation where lives are at stake makes them not the military, since many real-world military organizations (including the US) devote sizable amounts of resources to non-combative tasks helping people in danger or need. Very often, some of the more immediate threats to UFP lives or interests ARE military in nature, but there are plenty of natural phenomena and other such threats to be had. Consider this: the issue is that Starfleet places a great deal of importance on exploratory duties compared to real militaries.
Exploratory duties. You are using examples of Starfleet saving people from threats NOT caused by hostile armed forced as proof that Starfleet is not military. Yet those examples prove the exact opposite.
Starfleet officers on a Starfleet ship saving a group of civilians from some dangerous stellar phenomena is NOT an example of them carrying out their "exploratory duties." It's more like the real military being used to, say, evacuate a city before a natural disaster strikes. Despite the lack of combat, despite the lack of a hostile force being the threat, it is an example of Starfleet acting
as a military. Military officers rescue people in distress, all the time; it's expected of them. Not so with pure explorers.
As to the question raised by
plynch, I say
both. They are equally important. One is what they WANT to be doing when there is no crises, and what they would generally prefer to be doing (exploration), and the other is something they feel they
must do when the need arises, and when said need IS present, it out-prioritizes even the generally preferred exploratory mission. And we have also seen that though Starfleet officers are certainly not overly militaristic or in any way bloodthirsty, they do take pride in doing that sometimes necessary mission - combat - well. (Really, the "third" objective - saving those in distress in non-combat situations - seems to be just as important, as well).