Even if that means lying to them as well I assume, since I somehow doubt Sisko told the good folks of the Federation what he did.
Hopefully I'll be dead before that comes to pass. If not, suicide might start to seem like a viable alternative.
Hasn't this discussion veered into Miscellaneous forum territory?
If you want to be 100% moral during a war, you should surrender from the beginning, allowing the citizens you were sworn to protect to wallow in oppression, misery and suffering under the boot of their conqueror.
Which makes the decision to surrender itself quite immoral.
If you choose to fight, that means killing enemies - if you want to win the war, rather than committing suicide, that is.
Which is immoral.
Sisko had the choice between the federation being conquered and its citizens enslaved or the romulans getting a bloody nose in war losses. The episode makes clear there was no third option - not one, that is, with chances of happening larger than winning the lottery.
Sisko prioritized his own people, whom he was sworn to protect. His decision was morally gray - but the least dark of his available choices.
Plus, there were a lot of mitigating circumstances - the high probability that the federation would have fallen, the high probability that the dominion would have come for the romulans after it was finished with the federation, the fact that the federation owed the romulans nothing positive (cold warriors, lately with the romulans letting the jem'hadar cross their territory to kill federation citizens), the fact that Sisko only did the forgery and Garak planned and did the murders, etc.
One of the few clear definitions of an enemy is someone who, by his actions, directly - or indirectly - works towards your destruction.The Romulans were not the enemies, the Dominion were.
If we appreciate Sisko's decision, should we also not appreciate more the Romulans decision to attack the station in that episode and collapse the wormhole?
Yes we should.
Looking back at it, if we justify Sisko's actions in ITPM, we MUST justify any action which may involve killing Sisko to prevent the war from ever happening.
I would say "The Search" made it pretty darn clear that the Dominion had every intention of bringing calamity upon the Alpha Quadrant, and it was only reinforced by the events of "The Die is Cast" (don't recall if that was before or after "Visionary", but then, even if it was after, the Feds could have borrowed from the Romulans' playbook). If the Romulans' plan had succeeded, many Federation lives would ultimately have been spared, certainly more than were saved due to Sisko's actions in ITPM.
I don't recall the sense of impending doom in ITPM that you're reading into the events of the episode. And heck, the last time the AQ faced impending doom Sisko pulled a Deus ex Machina out of the wormhole. If anything there seems to be evidence that the Feds shouldn't be quite so quick to abandon all hope.
I would say "The Search" made it pretty darn clear that the Dominion had every intention of bringing calamity upon the Alpha Quadrant, and it was only reinforced by the events of "The Die is Cast" (don't recall if that was before or after "Visionary", but then, even if it was after, the Feds could have borrowed from the Romulans' playbook). If the Romulans' plan had succeeded, many Federation lives would ultimately have been spared, certainly more than were saved due to Sisko's actions in ITPM.
I don't recall the sense of impending doom in ITPM that you're reading into the events of the episode. And heck, the last time the AQ faced impending doom Sisko pulled a Deus ex Machina out of the wormhole. If anything there seems to be evidence that the Feds shouldn't be quite so quick to abandon all hope.
If the Romulans' plan had succeeded, many Federation lives would ultimately have been spared, certainly more than were saved due to Sisko's actions in ITPM.
This is true I remember Robert Hewitt Wolfe saying that, the Dominion had the Federation in their sights for a while, it was the wormhole that sped up their confrontation.
As opposed to Sisko's speculation that without deceiving the Romulans into joining the war, the AQ will fall?
When does a speculation become acceptably large, exactly?
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