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Did TNG predict the catalyst for ST2009?

Nah, if anything Endgame makes it clear there's still some diplomatic relations between the Federation and the Klingons. B'Elanna Torres is the Federation's ambassador to the Empire in the future.
In the four-issue Star Trek: Countdown comic book, JeanLuc Picard is the Federation ambassador to Vulcan.

Just saying.

:devil:
 
Here's an idea.

The Klingon high council is smarter than they seem. They knew they couldn't fight the Federation and the Romulans at the same time. But they also knew how to make sure they didn't have to fight the Federation: Be nice to them. So by making an alliance with the Federation they could quietly rebuild their forces, be protected from Romulan attacks and then not have to deal with the Federation on another front when they finally invaded Romulus. The plan all along was to conquer Romulus and then attack the Federation again. Gowron and Duras didn't know about the plan but the rich families behind the throne knew they could easily get whoever was in charge to do whatever they wanted.

Of course if that's true, it would imply that Martok was quietly assassinated some point a couple years after the end of the Dominion War.
In DS9 s7 though, Sloan predicted the Klingons would take around 10 years to recover

SLOAN: To evaluate an ally. And a temporary ally at that. I say that because when the war is over, the following will happen in short order. The Dominion will be forced back to the Gamma Quadrant, the Cardassian Empire will be occupied, the Klingon Empire will spend the next ten years recovering from the war and won't pose a serious threat to anyone. That leaves two powers to vie for control of the quadrant, the Federation and the Romulans.
BASHIR: This war isn't over and you're already planning for the next.



Indeed of the 3 main powers, they were the ones who were worst off. You can imagine they really went tooth and nail fighting the Dominion, and especially how battered their fleet must have been after the time in late s7 when they were the only ones fighting in the war (with the Romulans and Federation withdrawing until they could develop a defense against the Breen weapons)

What I'm saying though is these were their plans before the Dominion showed up. The Dominion threat changed their plans, especially as changeling-Martok was egging Gowron toward war.

In Heart Of Glory and Matter of Honor I didn't get the impression that the Klingons were part of the Federation, so much as they had put their warrior days behind them and moved in a new less aggressive cultural direction.
 
^^Heart of Glory at least carries a strong implication Klingons are members of the Federation since the bridge of the Klingon ship has the Federation's flag on the wall. And then there's Samaritan Snare where Wesley actually asks "was this before the Klingons joined the Federation?"
 
I doubt All Good Things played a role in the writers' decision to blow up Romulus (though as F. King Daniel pointed out, it was still around in that future). But I wouldn't put it past the writers to cite it eventually if it comes to that. After all, they cited Parallels as the inspiration for the mechanics behind the alternate timeline idea for '09.
 
Star Trek Magazine had an article in the lead-up to Star Trek Online, where they charted (in a format ala the Star Trek Chronology) the major events that shaped the Trek universe seen in the game, between Nemesis, the 2009 movie and onwards to ST:Online. The article cleverly managed to incorporate elements of the AGT future into it (Picard becoming an ambassador then retiring to France; Beverly becoming Captain of the Pasteur; Worf's role as a governor on a Klingon world; the Romulans becoming a weakened force and the Klingons taking the opportunity to annexe territory from the former empire following Romulus's collapse; increased tensions between the Federation and Klingons; etc) while still being plausible with the way things developed in Nemesis and ST2009. A kind of collaborative meshing of entirely disparate ideas.

Having just re-read the article in question this weekend, I must say it's surprising how consistently it all holds up as a plausible post-AGT, post-DS9, post-Nemesis, post-ST2009 narrative. :)
 
^^Heart of Glory at least carries a strong implication Klingons are members of the Federation since the bridge of the Klingon ship has the Federation's flag on the wall. And then there's Samaritan Snare where Wesley actually asks "was this before the Klingons joined the Federation?"

Wow...I never noticed the Federation flag in that episode. Seen that episode at least a half dozen times and there's still stuff I've missed...
 
I've never played Star Trek Online, but I hate the idea that the Klingons would become antagonistic towards the Federation yet again. I mean Jebus, make your mind up guys.

STO is pretty mediocre at the best of times, bit it's not like they pulled this out of their asses. "All Good Things" "The Visitor" "Endgame", pretty much every depiction of "the future" (relative to the shows normal setting) shows the Federation and Klingons becoming enemies again. They're just kind of shitty allies.
LOL! Agreed!
Not to mention DS9 season 4, too. The UFP and Klingon Empire being allies really doesn't make all that much sense when you think about it. Simply not being engaged in a war, or a cold war, against each other, doesn't necessarily make them allies. Their relationship should more properly be classified as a non-aggression pact.
 
Really what made the Federation and Klingons allies were having enemies they hated way more than each other. The Romulans, the Dominion. They've always gotten along the best when they have a common threat.

When there's no common threat, Klingon politicians in need of political allies play up the glorious warrior past against Federation pacifism.
 
I doubt that J.J. Abrams and his crew took inspiration from "All Good Things...", but the producers of Star Trek Online clearly did.

But it seems to me that STO charted its own path with D'tan's Romulan Republic. Plus the whole return of the Iconians.

I hope that if Star Trek returns to after Nemesis in the prime reality, the Federation Starfleet will indeed have the Galaxy class refit from "All Good Things..." and not with any new name like Galaxy X class. The Constitution and Miranda class (in the novels for the latter) refits didn't need a new name. And I agree that the Klingon Empire should become part of the Federation at some point in the future.
 
And I agree that the Klingon Empire should become part of the Federation at some point in the future.
How? I don't see that unless they overwhelmingly lose a war with the UFP (not possible...such a war would devastate both sides, where neither is a clear cut winner), or Klingons have their version of Surak (again, not possible unless the Klingons are utterly conquered by some external power or by civil war, and there is a movement where they see the futility of war).
 
I could see the Federation and the Empire combining into a single entity, but not the Empire becoming a part of the Federation (nor the Federation becoming a part of the Empire).

")
 
I don't see the need or justification for the Klingons to join the Federation. I'm not saying that out of a desire to always have the two sides in play for future conflict, hot, cold or otherwise. Just that it seems reasonable that there is enough space for both to maintain their independent identities, expand, and be focused on their own sphere(s) of influence.

If future hostilities do come about, they can just as easily be caused by outside stressors, i.e. developments of other actors that are beyond the influence or control of either the Empire or the Federation and not because of a fated enmity that is somehow intrinsic to the Klingon cultural DNA.

But, other than an ideologically tinged hope for all races to break bread, have common cause, say kumbaya, etc. I don't think that it's an integral facet of a healthy and effective Federation to need to have every other sizable and influential entity in the galaxy join under its banner.
 
I've never played Star Trek Online, but I hate the idea that the Klingons would become antagonistic towards the Federation yet again. I mean Jebus, make your mind up guys.

I much prefer to think that the Dominion War made them even stronger allies, as really even though they were at peace/allies from 2293, and strengthed by the Enterprise-C incident of 2344, all the way up to DS9 they'd never really fought side by side.
From what we know anyway, there were wars/skirmishes during that time such as the Cardassian border wars, Talarian & Tzenkethi conflicts etc, but I doubt the Klingons ever got involved in those.

I like to think the Klingons were impressed with the UFP in those battles and realised they weren't as "weak & pathetic" as they often made them out to be. And then as Daniels said in Azati Prime, the Klingons eventually join the Federation at some point.

I don't see how that could work. It would be like China trying to join the U.S. The Empire would dwarf any other member world. And Klingons are too fiercely independent to do that unless they had been reduced to a single world, or something.
 
And I agree that the Klingon Empire should become part of the Federation at some point in the future.
How? I don't see that unless they overwhelmingly lose a war with the UFP (not possible...such a war would devastate both sides, where neither is a clear cut winner), or Klingons have their version of Surak (again, not possible unless the Klingons are utterly conquered by some external power or by civil war, and there is a movement where they see the futility of war).
I've never played Star Trek Online, but I hate the idea that the Klingons would become antagonistic towards the Federation yet again. I mean Jebus, make your mind up guys.

I much prefer to think that the Dominion War made them even stronger allies, as really even though they were at peace/allies from 2293, and strengthed by the Enterprise-C incident of 2344, all the way up to DS9 they'd never really fought side by side.
From what we know anyway, there were wars/skirmishes during that time such as the Cardassian border wars, Talarian & Tzenkethi conflicts etc, but I doubt the Klingons ever got involved in those.

I like to think the Klingons were impressed with the UFP in those battles and realised they weren't as "weak & pathetic" as they often made them out to be. And then as Daniels said in Azati Prime, the Klingons eventually join the Federation at some point.

I don't see how that could work. It would be like China trying to join the U.S. The Empire would dwarf any other member world. And Klingons are too fiercely independent to do that unless they had been reduced to a single world, or something.
Well I think that exposure to Federation values has changed the Klingon Empire's culture. After a few more centuries, they'll have laws and a culture suitable for Federation membership.
 
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