In "Errand of Mercy" the Federation and the Klingons both lost to The Organians. Maybe that counts more as a "tie". Nothing-to-nothing.
Millions of lives were saved, so I think both the Klingons and the Federation came out as unqualified winners.In "Errand of Mercy" the Federation and the Klingons both lost to The Organians. Maybe that counts more as a "tie". Nothing-to-nothing.
The original disputes which lead to war were still there, and at some point the Organians stopped paying attention.Millions of lives were saved, so I think both the Klingons and the Federation came out as unqualified winners.
I'm unaware of any evidence that the original disputes led to later war. Whenever war finally came, it seems to have been sometime between TUC and TNG. The reason for that conflict is unclear, but some of it at least involved the Romulans ("Yesterday's Enterprise"), who didn't seem to be a party in "Errand of Mercy" at all.The original disputes which lead to war were still there, and at some point the Organians stopped paying attention.
Did millions still die, just later?
In Voyager's Twisted they kind of loose. They try to do everything they can to fight off the anomaly but in the end they realize there is nothing they can do. They end up not being harmed but they didn't know what was going to happen
Win : Kirk actually gets the objective given to him by Starfleet, even if not by his own acts ("We are to proceed to Organia and take whatever steps are necessary to prevent the Klingons from using it as a base. ")
Since Organia was not a member of the Federation, Starfleet wanted Kirk to break the Prime Directive?
Well I suppose an organisation that is allowed to blow up planets will do anything. And Picard and Kelvin Scotty believe Starfleet officers are just explorers lolWho better?
To each their own. I like it. Its a fun episode about an unknown anomaly, they can't communicate or figure it out.God, that was a terrible episode.
How did they lose in Best of Both Worlds? Are you adding a minimum body count criteria to victory?
What constitutes a victory anyway? Does it have to be total victory or do you just have to accomplish your goal? Is there a line of too many casualties where it ceases to be a victory? Or when we get into that are we just trying to be proud-of-ourselves clever criticizing the writing for handwaving casualties?
Empok Nor is pretty clearly a defeat, with over a 70% casualty rate, and no clear goal accomplished except for three people not dying. And Enterprise season 3 they were defeated over and over until they finally won in the one timeline that stuck.
It seems a bit silly and proud-of-yourself clever to say Best of Bost Worlds isn't a victory. They lost 23 starships against an enemy that should have destroyed their entire civilization. DS9 had much higher casualty figures, but they still saved their civilization over an enemy which by numbers should have won. It's hard not to legitimately call bitter victories still victories.
I'm unaware of any evidence that the original disputes led to later war. Whenever war finally came, it seems to have been sometime between TUC and TNG. The reason for that conflict is unclear, but some of it at least involved the Romulans ("Yesterday's Enterprise"), who didn't seem to be a party in "Errand of Mercy" at all.
In fiction, victories tend to be just for the day, with tomorrow bringing new drama. Are you saying it's somehow a bad thing that the Organians prevented war for at least a generation, saving particular lives that would certainly have been lost had they not intervened?
SAREK: It could be Pardek.
PICARD: Who is Pardek?
SAREK: He is a Romulan Senator. Spock has maintained a relationship with him over the years. I don't know how they met. At the Khitomer Conference, I'd imagine.
PICARD: Pardek represented Romulus?
SAREK: Yes, I'm sure he did. In fact, I recall Spock coming to me with optimism about a continuing dialogue with the Romulans. I told him it was illogical to maintain such an expectation. Spock was always so impressionable. This Romulan, Pardek, had no support at home. Of course, in the end I was proven correct. I gave Spock the benefit of experience, of logic. He never listened. Never listened.
PARDEK: Spock, we've been friends for eighty years.
K'EHLEYR: Haven't changed a bit. Well, I missed you, too. Two days ago, Starbase Three Three Six received an automated transmission from a Klingon ship, the T'Ong. That ship was sent out over seventy five years ago.
RIKER: When the Federation and the Klingon Empire were still at war.
K'EHLEYR: The message was directed to the Klingon High Command. It said only that the ship was returning home and was about to reach its awakening point.
PICARD: Which suggests that the crew had been in cryogenic sleep for that long journey.
K'EHLEYR: Exactly.
RIKER: And when this crew is revived?
K'EHLEYR: We'll have a ship full of Klingons who think the war is still going on.
PICARD: So our task is to find the ship, and tell the Klingons they're no longer at war.
RIKER: Why us? Wouldn't a Klingon ship be a better choice?
K'EHLEYR: A Klingon ship, the P'rang, is on its way, but it's two days behind us. That may be too late.
TROI: Why too late?
RIKER: When the T'Ong crew awakens it will be within striking range of several Federation outposts.
That ship was sent out over seventy five years ago
Stardate 9521.6, Captain's log, U.S.S. Excelsior. Hikaru Sulu commanding. After three years I've concluded my first assignment as master of this vessel, cataloguing gaseous planetary anomalies in the Beta Quadrant. We're heading home under full impulse power. I am pleased to report that ship and crew have functioned well.
SULU: Praxis is their key energy production facility. ...Send to Klingon High Command. 'This is Excelsior, a Federation starship. We have monitored a large explosion in your sector. Do you require assistance?'
KERLA (on viewscreen): This is Brigadier Kerla, speaking for the High Command. There has been an incident on Praxis. However everything is under control. We have no need for assistance. Obey treaty stipulations and remain outside the Neutral Zone. This transmission ends now.
Its all about perspective...win and lose generally comes down to who has more ammunitionWhen I started this thread, I must say I was mainly thinking about opponents our crew encounters only once. For me a 'loss' is more when our side is frustrated in accomplishing their goal(s), not so much if the other side is winning or losing. (So it would be possible our side loses, without the other side necessarily 'winning'). In case of returning opponents, I'd say that it's the intentions with the character during the original episode that count. So I'll count a one-time criminal that fools the crew and escapes as a 'loss' for the crew, even if he was later brought back in an episode and got his comeuppance there, whereas for a guy like Dukat it was always clear he was not going to win in the end.
This 'hard choice', or 'virtue of losing some, winning some' is an element which I feel might have disappeared somewhat from later trek. For example, in Endgame (Voy), the situation is originally presented in terms of just such a hard choice: "we can either go home or deal a crippling blow to the Borg, but not both!". But they then find a way to accomplish both goals at the same time nonetheless. Which makes me wonder if forcing such hard choices upon our heroes has become 'less acceptable' over the years.
Then again, perhaps I shouldn't be comparing a series' final with a regular episode, since of course matters are wrapped up there in a satisfactory manner. Also, to be fair to Voyager, you could say that the entire series is based upon such a hard choice. They could have opted not to destroy the Caretaker's array and let the Ocampa and Kazon sort things out, after all. So perhaps it is only fitting that in the final episode they "get to have their cake and eat it too".
Also, I would be grateful if a moderator deleted that superfluous 'o' from 'loose' in the topic title. Can't edit it myself, as far as I know.
Since Organia was not a member of the Federation, Starfleet wanted Kirk to break the Prime Directive?
Thanks for the refresher, @MAGolding.
I might indeed have been too declarative in my assertion that at least some of the hot conflict between the Federation and Klingons involved the Romulans. Canonically a lot is sketchy, but I probably should have said that it's merely conceivable that some of it involved the Romulans.
What I was going by was that, by "Yesterday's Enterprise," the Battle of Narendra III occurred in 2344. On the other hand, according to Bashir, two decades of peace between the Federation and Klingons ended with the events of "The Way of the Warrior," which would mean that immediately prior to 2352, give or take, the Federation and Klingons were in a state of war. It's true, there's enough wiggle room to make Narendra III the lone catalyst of peace, but it's not clear at all that peace broke out all over because of that. It's also conceivable, AFAIK, that the hot conflict between the Federation and Klingons ended well before circa 2344-2350, but that it was only around that period that a formal peace treaty was finally signed.
Reference: http://memory-alpha.wikia.com/wiki/Human-Klingon_history and linked-to articles.
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