Ian Keldon
Fleet Captain
Your world is very black and white isn't it ?
What is right and what is wrong is usually pretty obvious.
A free and soverign Israel in it's own homeland is only a downpayment on the blood debt the entire world owes the Jewish people for thousands of years prejudice and persecution, culminating in the Holocaust.I presume you don't see America's (and much of the West's) unconditional support of Israel as being in any way responsible for the problems in the Middle East ?
Darfur, Somalia, and a host of other places.I agree that the UN is pretty hopeless at times - it hardly covered itself with glory in the Balkans for instance.
Let's see, the Russians:In the real world, Soviet Russia was literally terrified of the West and the whole cold war intelligence effort was driven by responding to the perceived threat rather than being simply aggressive. How different is the Romulan situation ?
1. were willing members of the Axis. As an Axis power, they committed the same sorts of atrocities their German counterparts did, on an even bigger scale, at least until Germany stabbed them in the back (much like the Dominion did Cardassia).
THEN they switched sides (again like Cardassia).
2. After the war, they refused to free the lands they'd taken. They formed a bogus "Warsaw Pact" that ruled Eastern Europe in an iron fist. They routinely spied upon and attempted to subvert western civilization, all the while committing massive atrocities against their own citizens. (Look up how many people Stalin alone is responsible for the deaths of, as just one example.)
So I shed no tears for the Soviet Union. They were indeed an evil empire, and we should have listened to Patton and finished them off while we had the chance.
I know it's de rigeur on a Trek board to buy into GR's "we can all get along" absolutism, but reality is not Star Trek, and in terms of Trek fic, the reality is that the Pact is just another Big Bad, as many of us knew it was going to be.
Heck, don't just take my word for it. Let's go to the source. From Keith R. A. DeCandido, the author who created the Typhon Pact along with Marco Palmieri:
The idea was to come up with a logical outgrowth of the devastation we got in Destiny. The Pact didn't come together in order to become an antagonist to the Federation. Quite the opposite: they were inspired by the Federation. In the wake of the Borg invasion, the powers are all less than they were, but as allies they can shore up each others' weaknesses.
As Sonek Pran said at the end of A Singular Destiny when the Pact formed, their motivation is not dissimilar to that of the humans, Vulcans, Andorians, and Tellarites who formed the Federation.
You don't see the Federation going around and doing what the Pact has been doing lately as a primary action. Their surveillance, espionage, etc has been an entirely defensive response to Pact crimes and aggression.
What legitimate interest gives the Pact the right to sabotage Federation research? Spy on their engine research programs? What legitimate interest gives them the right to do what they've done recently?
Concerns over the Federation's development of a quantum sliptream FTL drive that would make warp drive obsolete and theoretically allow Federation forces to make first strikes are legitimate.
1. Warp drive suddenly doesn't work any more?
2. The Federation doesn't do those sorts of things absent a provocation...the sort of which every member of the Pact has committed at one time or another, and the Pact just did in spades at Bajor. A QS equipped Starfleet is no threat to any power that respects the rights of sentience and doesn't threaten galactic peace in general or the Federation in particular.
The Federation's allies in the Khitomer Accords aren't exactly flawless, you'll note. The Ferengi have a reputation as overly aggressive and unscrupulous merchanters who kept the female proportion of their population naked and uneducated until recently, while the Cardassians were rigid brutal imperialists whose desire for universal dominion triggered a catastrophic multi-quadrant war and even now the Klingons are still trying to conquer independent species for their own aggrandizement.For that matter, the Breen alone are notorious for their use of slave labor, general treachery, and most seriously their willing alliance with the Dominion against the Federation.
What does it say about the Federation that these are its key allies? Yes, they are reforming their ways to various degrees and in various ways, but still.[/quote]
I agree that the Federation has made some questionable alliances, and should reconsider them.
I see no problem with Christopher and the other pro contributors to "The Typhon Pact" storyline putting most of their energies into the next TP novels rather that attempting to debate endlessly with TrekBBS denizens.
The story they THINK they're telling and the story they're ACTUALLY telling are two different things.
I don't think they planned it this way per-se, but that's the way it turned out...the only way it COULD turn out realistically, given the nature of the races in the Pact as evidenced by their past acts.
Exactly. And we've seen plenty of examples of rogue elements within the UFP (the Genesis Wave, Section 31, the Maquis, Insurrection) which to outsiders make the whole of the UFP "the enemy".
The difference is that the Federation deals with it's "rogues", sometimes even when it shouldn't have forced them into going rouge in the first place.
If the Federation had done it's sovereign duty to protect the homes and lives of the border colonists along the Cardassian frontier and not sold them out in the name of a sham "peace treaty" (which the Cardies promptly started subverting), then there would have been no need for the Maquis.
And Sci, you couldn't be more wrong on Iraq, but the necessary lengthy explanation of how and why would probably get me in trouble for going too far OT.