I imagine the Sovereign is different by being much smaller and limited in its abilities. It's the new flagship
Except it's never said to be that.
Indeed, ships named
Enterprise are particularly notorious for never being flagships. The two exceptions would appear to be the E-D (which never serves as a Starfleet flagship but is considered the Federation Flagship) and the Kelvinverse NCC-1701 (which is "the newest flagship" when launched in the 2009 movie).
It's in the movie. Riker asks why they're not sent to the battle and Picard says it's not the ship, it's its captain.
So it's left as an exercise to the audience to decide why Picard is lying.
Okay, it's pretty clear why he's lying that the rest of the command crew is not at fault (because obviously they are, being yes-men to Picard). Picard doesn't want his crew to feel bad about it. But why does he worry about his ship feeling bad for being such a lemon?
That's what is in the movie - the
ship is not accepted into the anti-Borg force, and indeed is never even considered for this, because she's deployed in deep space with a pariah crew that is forbidden from taking the ship to battle. Starfleet appears to have decided there's too much wrong with the ship well in advance, then, or else it wouldn't dedicate the vessel into quarantine duty for her entire career.
They're the flagship crew. On the new flagship.
Since the E-E is not the flagship or even a flagship, we have all the more reason to think the heroes got demoted (even if sideways) for hanging around the suspected traitor.
It's only the Borg Starfleet is antsy trusting Picard on, with good reason given his actions in the movie.
Which would be an easily solved issue: remove Picard from the equation.
Which Starfleet does
not do here, mind you, not in any practical sense. Picard still flies a ship that is perfectly capable of traitorously joining the battle (even if she doesn't achieve anything exceptional there). So what Starfleet is doing instead is
trusting Picard to stay away in that ship of his. It's misplaced trust, but trust nevertheless. All the more reason, then, to choose to think that it's the ship that's worthless, or at least in sore need for an even longer shakedown.
Yes. Whatever their aesthetic shortcomings, they're the latest and greatest out the dock.
Even this much we cannot say. The design shares elements with those old
Steamrunners, say. Her engines are more like those of the
Nova than of the potentially newer
Intrepid.
At best, we can speculate. We don't see any particular shipbuilding style perpetuated after the TNG movie era, because we see little or nothing of the Trek universe after that era. The
Sovereign might have been a dead end and the
Inquiry is the way ahead. Or then the
Sovereign was the harbinger of great things, and the
Curiosity, only seen in suggestive silhouette, keeps up the good tradition.
At the time of the TNG movies, we know almost as little. Many of the ships in ST:FC are of previously unseen designs, and none are the class ships of the respective classes, so they could date back as far as we choose. That NCC-1701-E lacks a pseudo-chronological registry altogether makes the choosing even more ambiguous than normally...
They're going to be used in crucial positions while more are being built.
Not if all of them require shakedowns of a full year and still aren't considered ready for action.
They were probably holding together whole systems (or sectors!) by themselves so that all the older ships therein could join the Galaxy fleets during the invasion of Cardassian space. Or maybe Admiral Ross was on one.
Here we have the saving grace that the Bajoran neighborhood was a strategically unimportant area for most of the war: either the wormhole was in enemy hands, or useless to both sides, and there was not going to be a final rush from Richmond to Washington or vice versa until the very end of the war. So the only time Starfleet would send top units to be seen in a DS9 episode would be in the retaking of the station when the minefield was going down - and
that one was a hasty operation where Sisko had to beg for forces, and probably didn't get the best ships.
Or then the totally absent
Sovereign just plain wasn't among "the best ships", either with the qualifier "yet", or then without it.
It's not to the detriment of our heroes even if they happen to be assigned a rust bucket. Indeed, Kirk and even Pike seemed to get mileage out of a ship that was decades out of date and not particularly large for her day; all the more glory to them. And now perhaps to Picard, who remains as untrustworthy as ever, but for the ultimate good of the Federation.
Timo Saloniemi