I'll decomission mine after you mothball yours.Rarewolf said:
I'd imagine the opposite, I think they'd be decommissioned for political reasons. New peace treaty only if you decommission the warships.

I'll decomission mine after you mothball yours.Rarewolf said:
I'd imagine the opposite, I think they'd be decommissioned for political reasons. New peace treaty only if you decommission the warships.
First Contact is canon. Whether its part of your continuity is another story.anti-matter said:
The Defiant was made to help counter the Borg threat... if you accept 'First Contact' as canon...then the threat remains. Thus then the Defiant or its successor class ships still have a mission post Nemesis.
Braxton said:
The Norway-class does seem like a good replacement for the Miranda.
nx1701g said:
Braxton said:
The Norway-class does seem like a good replacement for the Miranda.
Though unlikely - the mesh was lost in a system crash![]()
anti-matter said:
The Defiant was made to help counter the Borg threat... if you accept 'First Contact' as canon...then the threat remains. Thus then the Defiant or its successor class ships still have a mission post Nemesis.
Rarewolf said:
I'd imagine the opposite, I think they'd be decommissioned for political reasons. New peace treaty only if you decommission the warships.
One argument for the Treaty of Algernon might have been simply to keep things civil between the Federation and the Romulans. Aside from the Pegasus Incident, had the Federation gone ahead and equipped all their ships with cloaking technology, that might have made the current situation with the Romulans even worse. As it stands, the Romulans still honor the Neutral Zone. If the Federation had cloaked ships, that might have given the Romulans an excuse to turn a cold war into a hot one.Unicron said:
I kind of wish the cloak was standard equipment, because the "no cloaks for Starfleet" rule has never made much sense given how we've usually seen them used - as the Trek equivalent of modern stealth systems. The only reason the ban exists is because Gene didn't want the good guys to be "sneaky."
As, clearly, a handful of pocket battleships is the only possible way that any security threat could ever be studied and handled in a controlled fashion ever. Anyone suggesting any other possible distribution of resources or priorities is a fool.Sci said:
There is a strong, strong need for the Federation to maintain an adequate defense force -- which means keeping the Defiants. Anyone doesn't like it, they can go hang; it would be positively treasonous for the Federation government to take away such a strong defensive measure from a Federation facing so many security threats
C.E. Evans said:
One argument for the Treaty of Algernon might have been simply to keep things civil between the Federation and the Romulans. Aside from the Pegasus Incident, had the Federation gone ahead and equipped all their ships with cloaking technology, that might have made the current situation with the Romulans even worse. As it stands, the Romulans still honor the Neutral Zone. If the Federation had cloaked ships, that might have given the Romulans an excuse to turn a cold war into a hot one.
Unicron said:
C.E. Evans said:
One argument for the Treaty of Algernon might have been simply to keep things civil between the Federation and the Romulans. Aside from the Pegasus Incident, had the Federation gone ahead and equipped all their ships with cloaking technology, that might have made the current situation with the Romulans even worse. As it stands, the Romulans still honor the Neutral Zone. If the Federation had cloaked ships, that might have given the Romulans an excuse to turn a cold war into a hot one.
It's an interesting idea, but I'm not sure I agree. The NZ has nothing to do with the technology possessed by the two governments; it exists as a means of keeping the peace after the war between Earth and Romulus.
The Treaty of Algeron was signed after the Tomed Incident in 2311, and no doubt contains other provisions besides the "no cloak" rule. We just haven't been privy to those unfortunately, making the treaty seem lopsided. The notion that the good guys shouldn't use stealth technology because they would seem "sneaky" is like saying the U.S. shouldn't have defensive nuclear weapons, because we're supposed to be a democratic republic.
Besides, the creation of the Fed-Klingon alliance has given them a convenient bypass around the restriction. The Romulans are powerless (short of war) to stop the Feds from hitching rides on cloaked Klingon vessels, as we saw several times. And we saw in TNG that after the Romulan isolation ended, they launched several incursions into Federation space because they felt threatened by the new balance of power.
In the end, I just don't see Fed use of cloaks as a huge deal to the Romulans. They're already more knowledgable about the technology than the Feds, and perhaps the Klingons are, and the limitations of the technology still prevent it from being a wonder weapon.
C.E. Evans said:
IMO, if the Federation had cloaking tech, the Romulans would be less bound to honor the Neutral Zone because they would see the Federation as a threat perhaps even bigger than that of the Klingons. I think the Romulans would cross the Neutral Zone in a heartbeat if that was the case.
Interestingly, I would see it as the reverse of the U.S.' nuclear non-proliferation act. Instead of us telling another country they can't have this tech, another country has told us we can't have this tech. We're all "the good guys" in our own eyes, but not everyone sees things that way.
I think the non-use of cloaking devices was really just developed to reinforce the peace with the Romulans, IMO. The Romulans wouldn't like it if the Federation equipped all its ships with cloaks, and to possibly prevent another round of war, the Federation made this concession. As Admiral Pressman demonstrated, not everyone thought it was a wise idea because it without question enables the Romulans to maintain a notable tactical advantage over the Federation.
But isn't that just more of the same games of brinksmanship that the Federation and the Romulans have been playing since 2267? There's always been minor violations of the Neutral Zone--heck, Kirk blatantly invaded Romulan space on a secret mission to steal a cloaking device--but I think the important thing is that the two sides have still never gone to a full-out war. In hindsight, the Romulans have done a better job honoring its treaty with the Federation than the Klingons did (although the Dominion was partially responsible for the brief dissolution of the Khitomer Accords).
Unicron said:
C.E. Evans said:
IMO, if the Federation had cloaking tech, the Romulans would be less bound to honor the Neutral Zone because they would see the Federation as a threat perhaps even bigger than that of the Klingons. I think the Romulans would cross the Neutral Zone in a heartbeat if that was the case.
Why? We've seen that the Klingons, the Breen and other races have cloaking tech and seem to use it to a fairly regular degree; the Romulans may have a lot of skill and some superiority with this technology, but it's hardly unique to them. This is another reason I don't see it as a huge deal.
The fact that the Feds have developed reasonable countermeasures like the tachyon defense grids and can thus spot cloaked ships easily is another support. That to me would seem like a far larger threat in Romulan eyes, since it nullifies the advantage of the cloak.
Interestingly, I would see it as the reverse of the U.S.' nuclear non-proliferation act. Instead of us telling another country they can't have this tech, another country has told us we can't have this tech. We're all "the good guys" in our own eyes, but not everyone sees things that way.
I agree. You see my point though - just because another country doesn't want us to have nukes doesn't mean we would give them up easily. There would have to be a very powerful reason for us to do that.
But isn't that just more of the same games of brinksmanship that the Federation and the Romulans have been playing since 2267? There's always been minor violations of the Neutral Zone--heck, Kirk blatantly invaded Romulan space on a secret mission to steal a cloaking device--but I think the important thing is that the two sides have still never gone to a full-out war. In hindsight, the Romulans have done a better job honoring its treaty with the Federation than the Klingons did (although the Dominion was partially responsible for the brief dissolution of the Khitomer Accords).
That is true, but it does seem as if the Romulans have been responsible for more breaches than the Feds have. Several of the TNG incidents could have easily led to war, and luckily it was averted. To me, the efforts of Picard and other captains to avoid war says more about the Federation's willingness to honor the peace than the lack of cloaks.
C.E. Evans said:
But we're talking specifically about the Federation and the Romulans. Every galactic power out there could have cloaking technology, but as long as we're dealing specifically with Federation-Romulan relations, it doesn't matter who else has the tech. As I said before, I think the use of non-cloaking tech was likely a means to placate the Romulans. Sure, it places the Federation at a severe tactical disadvantage to other nations that have cloaking tech--that's undeniable--but the alternative might have been a repeat of the Romulan Wars of the 22nd-Century, and the Federation may have been desperate to avoid that at all costs.
It's not a perfect scenario, but I think it's a plausible one.
And why wouldn't the Romulans simply improve upon the cloak each time the Federation found a means to detect it? Even with the tenuous peace between the Federation and the Romulans, there is still something of a cold war brewing between them. I would think that the Romulans would be constantly trying to stay ahead of the Federation's ability to detect cloaked vessels.
The U.N. uses the threat of economic sanctions, but I think in Trek it would be the threat of another war with the Romulans.
Perhaps the Treaty of Algernon was borne out of desperation following the Tomed Incident. Relations between the Federation and the Romulans might have been on the brink during that time and war was averted only by the Federation making a number of major concessions--such as the use of cloaking tech.
Nebusj said:
As, clearly, a handful of pocket battleships is the only possible way that any security threat could ever be studied and handled in a controlled fashion ever. Anyone suggesting any other possible distribution of resources or priorities is a fool.Sci said:
There is a strong, strong need for the Federation to maintain an adequate defense force -- which means keeping the Defiants. Anyone doesn't like it, they can go hang; it would be positively treasonous for the Federation government to take away such a strong defensive measure from a Federation facing so many security threats
FPAlpha said:
I think after the Dominion war mop-up the Defiants would be mothballed.
<SNIP>
Now that the Romulans are sorting themselves out (i believe to the better judging by the stance of the real Romulan military helping Picard defeat Shinzon),
the Cardassians taken down a few notches
as well as the Breen and the Klingons equally weakened
i don't see some major power challenging the Federation in earnest.
When all this is done after a few years (5-10 maybe) i can see Starfleet return to its original role of exploration, diplomacy etc and a ship with the sole purpose of combat doesn't fit that profile and would send a wrong message.
However i doubt the Federation would be so dumb again to be caught pants down and they would decomission them in a way that they can be quickly reactivated, updated and crewed should they get into combat again.
They could hold the line until the whole Federation and Starfleet is mobilized properly.
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