Subsequent iterations of Trek retconned the concerns about Khan away from his tyrannical rule, and more towards his genetically engineered status. If I look at Space Seed with that in mind, I could imagine Kirk falsifying his log to protect Khan and his cohorts from Federation persecution and bigotry, merely for the crime of being born in a test-tube.
Tellingly, we see no anti-Augment propaganda in the actual late 20th and early 21st centuries, when the matter would still have been topical, but there's plenty to go around in the 24th century.
Timo Saloniemi
I guess the question deciding whether Kirk would falsify the "Space Seed" reports is, did meeting the real Khan confirm or contradict Kirk's preconceptions of the man? The events support the "ruthless but just, no massacres" image, as Khan never actually kills anybody, and only really attempts to kill one person in a logically minimalist move in chess-with-live-pawns.
...And then somebody uncovered them, perhaps in association with the events of the second movie in either universe, and Khan became a "war criminal" and a valid reason to burn Julian Bashir on a stake?
It's only at the darker edge of the Goldilocks Zone that Kirk would be compelled to lie to his superiors. But it's also the dramatically most interesting edge...
[I'd say that if Kirk was negligent anywhere, it was in not doing a thorough-enough scan of the surrounding Ceti Alpha system ("Ceti Alpha VI exploded six months after we were left here...")
OTOH, Khan was a Prince of Millions. A bit of pomp would make him ignore the circumstance and graciously accept banishment...I can't believe that Kirk would do all of that and then NOT send Starfleet the official record.
Or then Khan did move from V to VI, as part of a typically audacious and overcomplex supervillain plan.Something MADE Ceti Alpha VI blow up. It may have been something Kirk couldn't possibly know about...
Well, that would depend on exactly why Ceti Alpha VI exploded in the first place. And I'd hazard a guess that it wasn't something that could be easily predicted. Planets don't just explode for no reason. Something MADE Ceti Alpha VI blow up. It may have been something Kirk couldn't possibly know about...I'd put my money on the likelihood that it was Nerim, mining for Cosmoniium. Oops, wrong forum. Sorry about that.![]()
A thought: Does Kirk have the authority to give away a planet? I don't think so.
IMO, not only did Kirk not lie about Ceti Alpha V, I think he cleared his course of action with his higher-ups beforehand.
Well, they certainly are elsewhere in Trek. Habitable is to be expected: uninhabited is something of a surprise.
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