i took that line to mean other staff, possibly either Starfleet or civilian, most likely the latter considering his distrust of the military as why would Starfleet wait for their own people to go on leave.
Quite so. This part would indeed be just a coincidence, which David mistakenly takes for proof of a nefarious plan.
As for the Enterprise being the 'only' one nearby, Kirks an Admiral so may have checked to see if anyone was much closer than him, and if not requested the option to check it out...its not like they were expecting a madman in one of their own ships.
Exactly. He was chafing at the bit as it was, and now that his friends had arranged for this birthday cruise, he was certain to make the most of it.
But it's still quite a coincidence for him to be anywhere near Regula as the result of Sulu's random course choice. This regardless of whether Regula is in the same neglected region of space as the spot where Khan was found or where he was marooned, or somewhere else altogether.
As for Reliant not being flagged up, its possible that they were supposed to be light years away so when shown on a log of where everyone is 'supposed' to be they would just show up as a blip on a deployment map.
Then again, we can hardly expect Khan to have sailed to Regula at a speed higher than "emergency warp", which means he was just as close to the lab as Kirk was since both of them reached the location at the same time. (In fact, Khan got there a tad earlier.) We'd have to assume Starfleet never received a "we're here" announcement from Terrell when he reached Ceti Alpha, then, because the way the movie was cut, the trip from Ceti Alpha to Regula did not take weeks - it took only about the three days Chekov speaks of.
Kirk would thus necessarily have incorrect information about the
Reliant's whereabouts - but whether because Terrell couldn't be bothered to report, or was told not to report, we're not told. I just feel the latter would fit the evidence rather nicely.
...It even explains why our heroes don't go all "They are in our sector, even in the same quadrant - while they should currently be somewhere near Ceti Alpha or Dolphinus Beta according to this flight plan" when the ship makes the surprise appearance. If there's no official flight plan, there'd be a need to speculate on why
that is - but this speculation could wait because the rendezvous would probably provide the answer ASAP. If there's a plan, though, then there's no obvious "mystery about to be unrevealed" but rather just an annoying discrepancy.
Nuances, I know. But the pieces can be made to fit without too much force.
They thought Starfleet was after Genesis and decided to hide it from them as they knew how it could be perverted into a weapon. Marcus' plan would be wait until Kirk arrived to sort it out on the assumption he would fall on her side either not believing he gave the order or could be reasoned with.
Since Genesis appears so portable, it's even possible the Marcuses beamed down with it only
after Khan popped up and started slaughtering people.
Or then all the Genesis hardware was already down at the heart of the Regula rock, and all the Marcuses did was hit "delete" on the files on the lab computers and beam down themselves. Having a "scuttling command" prepared for the files is something I could see them doing in order to stall a Starfleet takeover attempt; hauling the entire experimental hardware away would probably not be worth the hassle, because a legitimate Starfleet crew would
know about the cave.
I mean, I trust that Terrell and Chekov knew about it, too. But Khan just wasn't clever enough to ask. (Nor Kirk, for that matter. It wouldn't occur for him to interrogate his still badly dazed old dimwit friend or his CO on dark secrets like this.)
Well the biggest error was the person onboard the Reliant who was reading the sensor data and failed to notice that there was a planet missing.
That'd depend on there being records about the Ceti Alpha system, and on our bored-out-of-their-skulls heroes paying attention.
In "The Doomsday Machine", our heroes observe the destruction of the entire system when reaching "the limits of the system", but that's when they come prepared for something dangerous, as they are responding to an SOS. In this movie, our heroes are simply going through a number of desert worlds in the hopes of finding one that would match the exacting parameters of the Marcus team, so they aren't going to have a second or even a first look at the non-desert ones. When they spot a desert world at roughly the same orbit where there's supposed to be one, they go for it and start assessing whether to study it or abandon it and quickly move to the next potential system.
Missing a missing planet does sound like something an intrepid team of space explorers shouldn't do. But we have to remember that these aren't Flash Gordons or Dan Dares staring at the wonders of the sky with bright blue eyes - they are hard-working space laborers who have a job to do and little patience for idle stargazing. If there's existing data on how the system should look, then the
Reliant posse won't look by themselves because that job is already done!
Timo Saloniemi