It's an "anachronism" the same way the ship's auto-destruct is. It exists as a last-ditch fallback for an extreme situation. Starfleet's responsibilities include the safety of the Federation and the hundreds of billions of beings therein.
Part of the problem is also it's status as a "General Order." It is probably just a poor choice of words by the writers. A general order is one of that applies to everyone under the issuing commander's jurisdiction (according to Wikipedia). So it does not really make sense to have a General Order to address an obscure situation. I suppose the full order might say, "in these situations, kill everything." But that's not how it was used in the episode.
Sisko did not kill anyone with the strike..
This is never confirmed in dialogue. All we learn is that he thought he would not. Then again, he also thought he was bombarding a "Maquis planet" - a conceptual whopper of his own concocting, as previously nobody had suggested that any of the DMZ worlds would actually have Maquis members or supporters as a significant minority, let alone a majority. It's a bit like Putin "justly" nuking out all of the US of A because it's factually known to be the nation of Tim McVeighs... And trusting that the inhabitants can still make a clean getaway because the NSA will have overheard Russia planning the nuclear strike and Americans have lots of aircraft.
If everybody down on the planet is a hardened freedom fighter, then 100% of them scampering into their ships in time to escape gruesome death is a defensible assumption. After all, hardened fighters would certainly be prepared to flee a Cardassian attack - why not a Starfleet one? But that's rather unlikely to be the case, unless we are not being told the whole story about the sudden emergence of "Maquis planets".
Timo Saloniemi
"Yo captain, I'm detecting mass quantities of player hate in this sector."
"Superlative, Numbah One, let's get crunk with General Order 24 and blow up their busted-ass planet."
Nicely put.They are getting the same treatment they give to every ship that comes through their system. General Order 24 works like Gort in 'Day the Earth Stood Still', blow up your planet to your heart's content, involve other worlds and be destroyed. Its not a perfect system, but it works. Had this been the Klingons, assuming the crew didn't die from laughter at the stupidity, it would have been Tuesday clean up the garbage day.
They are getting the same treatment they give to every ship that comes through their system. General Order 24 works like Gort in 'Day the Earth Stood Still', blow up your planet to your heart's content, involve other worlds and be destroyed. Its not a perfect system, but it works. Had this been the Klingons, assuming the crew didn't die from laughter at the stupidity, it would have been Tuesday clean up the garbage day.
They are getting the same treatment they give to every ship that comes through their system. General Order 24 works like Gort in 'Day the Earth Stood Still', blow up your planet to your heart's content, involve other worlds and be destroyed. Its not a perfect system, but it works. Had this been the Klingons, assuming the crew didn't die from laughter at the stupidity, it would have been Tuesday clean up the garbage day.
+1
"Yo captain, I'm detecting mass quantities of player hate in this sector."
"Superlative, Numbah One, let's get crunk with General Order 24 and blow up their busted-ass planet."
With "hellburner missiles," if my now-ancient memory of the Blish book is correct.The original story for "Operation: Annihilate" had a quite different ending than the one filmed. The original ending can be found in James Blish's adaptation of the episode.
In the original ending the Enterprise was to have tracked the alien parasites back to their planet of origin. And upon arrival proceeded to destroy the planet.
I actually like T'Girl's interpretation: that General Order 24 was simply a verbal code among the crew as a tool for bluffing.
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