^ Great comments from
J.T.B. and
Tom above.
Back to the O.P. for a moment:
I realize there may be no exact real life analogue in today's militaries, but I was interested in the thoughts of any of our knowledegable military folks about how two command dilemmas that presented themselves in "The Doomsday Machine" would be handled in real life. To wit:
1. Commanding officer puts first officer in command while off the ship. Higher ranked officer, but not one actually posted to the ship, comes on board. Can higher ranked officer assume command, or does the ship's actual first officer have the right to stay in command based on being assigned to the ship and having been put in command by the ship's commander?
2. Ship's commanding officer is now actually in communication with the ship. Higher ranked officer still asserting that he is in command. Can the legitimate commander of the ship assert his authority to hand command back over to his first officer, or does the flag officer win that battle?
Just curious...
I do not know enough about military chains of command and protocol to answer the O.P. intelligently, but again, I want to thank the O.P. for starting this thread.
There is another distinctive issue tucked away in all of this that may have been overlooked. I do not know if it is applicable to any of today's modern armies or navies. Consider this:
Three of TOS' commodores, Stone, Mendez and Stocker, asserted authority in one way or another (the illusion of Mendez especially, through Starfleet Command's orders) of command over either Kirk or the Enterprise.
I have a theory about how this works, and it is not related to divisions or any other direct squadron organization. Here goes...
While it is possible that Starfleet flag officers (senior officers above the rank of captain) may command specific spacecraft or flotillas of same (task forces, fleets, etc.), I would like to suggest that command officers such as these could also command
territories. Think of it this way. While it is possible that Stone was a "portmaster" in charge of Starbase 11's internal operations, he seemed to assert authority over Kirk even before the legal proceedings began. (Kirk did report to him to begin with.) Could it be that these flag officers are not just in charge of a given base or flotilla, but also the sector of space that the base is located in?
I've read one theory on these boards that Starbase 11 was so named not because it was the 11th such facility to be commissioned, but because the base is located in Sector 011. If this is the case, Stone and/or Mendez may command not just the base, but also all starship activity in Sector 011. The base may be where the office is located, but the sector may be the assignment. This would also correlate with
Admiral Komack's subspace radio paging of the Enterprise heard on the bridge's loudspeakers in "Amok Time" when he identified his command as Sector 9.
If this were the case in "The Doomsday Machine", Commodore Decker could have been assigned to the sector where the L-37x systems were located. If Decker were the ranking flag officer
for that sector (making it
his territory), then any Federation ships entering that sector at least could be subject to his command. So, for sake of argument, let's call this territory Sector 292. If Decker's territory were Sector 292, and there is not yet a base in Sector 292, Decker was instead assigned a flagship to serve as his mobile command base: the Constellation. In light of the ongoing emergency in the L-374 system within Sector 292, Decker asserted his territorial authority as the sector flag officer to assume command of the Enterprise.
Does any of this make sense? I have no idea if there is a modern military analogue to this or not.