And this is why the "24 enemies at once" interpretation doesn't really hold up. it's actually one divided enemy. A halfway-competent Federation should have been able to sow conflict among the various Klingon factions without much difficulty, and get them to waste time, energy, and resources fighting each other.If the Klingons had defeated the Federation because Starfleet had to divide all its resources, then the Klingons would just end up fighting each other afterwards until only the strongest faction and whoever allied with it was left standing.
Simple — there was a sizable fleet poised to attack Earth, the seat of government for the Federation and headquarters of Starfleet, and logically its most secure and heavily defended planet.Why all the talk about being brought to one's knees?
Granted, this was at odds with the strategy meeting in the previous episode, where we were told that various Klingon houses were mostly attacking various colonies and Starbases, harrying the Federation's weakest points. And granted it turned out to be a completely superfluous plot point, just to artificially crank up the stakes, since that fleet did nothing but wait and then turn away in the end (which was also implausible, no matter what happened on the homeworld).
We have no reason to believe that. The clear implication was that they received new orders from someone on Q'onos, and (amazingly) obeyed them. Any way you slice it, the point was clearly that the Klingons (at least briefly) posed an existential threat to the Federation. And that just doesn't add up.Apparently because they weren't sure they could pull it off...
Which it shouldn't have. As others have remarked, there's no reason the Klingons should have posed a credible match for the Federation, especially after Kor's death. The notion that the Federation couldn't win without the Discovery was contrived to make the hero ship seem more important, and unfortunately did so at the expense of plausibility and effective drama.Sounds like a classic Starfleet victory to me. The bad guys huff and puff, while the eggheads in the UFP come up with a way to tie their shoelaces together. Only it takes a spore drive ship...
On this, I mostly agree with you. Not because the Federation had no other means of containing him (despite the continuity callbacks you mention, we don't really know for sure), but rather because in the story as written, there was almost nothing for which they could convict him.As for Mudd, I rather think giving him to Grimes was elegant.