Actually I'd say it's completely different from that. Hunting downwind would be more akin to using a planet to hide behind until a target is close enough, at which point you engage in a fair fight, albeit with a slight advantage if you stay far back enough. In much the same way that if you get too close to, say, a deer while sneaking up on it from downwind; if you get anywhere close enough to strike them with anything but a firearm, they'll spot you and dart off.
A cloak lets you walk up to an enemy and backstab them at point-blank range before they even know what's going on. Or slip past an enemy's defenses and attack their civilian population, then disappear before they even know what happened, let alone have time to retaliate.
Those things aren't relatable at all to my eyes.
And your point being?During the age of sail it was an acceptable ruse de guerre was to fly a friendly or neutral nation's flag while you maneuvered your ship for a point blank range broadside. Then, just before you opened fire, you lowered the false flag and raised your own. It was only considered dishonorable if you didn't show your true colors first. The same principle can be followed right up to the Second World War. (The trial of Otto Skorzeny comes to mind.)
And your point being?
Also, are you saying that after you make that initial attack, you could then raise the flag and immediately all hostilities would stop as you "recloaked" and made your getaway?
As a whole, the Klingon culture/species doesn't appear as honorable as they claim to be.
Camoflage can, dress in civilian clothing and use the tip of your umbrella to stab a poison pellet into your target. You disappear into the crowd.Blinds, camouflage, and decoys don't let you walk up to someone and shiv them in the liver.
No, they are tactical tools. Submariners are hardly cowards. Soldiers who attack out of the darkness are hardly thieves. Attacking during a snowstorm, or a sandstorm, doesn't make you a assassian.Cloaking devices are tools of cowards, thieves, and assassins.
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