The Klingons never seemed to master dentistry.
Much like the British.
They turn up late to the fight in "Sacrifice of Angels" - much like the Americans

The Klingons never seemed to master dentistry.
Much like the British.
Clearly Starfleet seems to be the largest economic power in the known galaxy and often a large economic power can overwhelm a superior military force through sheer numbers, technological advances and alliances. Which seems to be what happened here.
Clearly Starfleet seems to be the largest economic power in the known galaxy and often a large economic power can overwhelm a superior military force through sheer numbers, technological advances and alliances. Which seems to be what happened here.
No what happend was the dominion fleet got cut off and had to reley on a 3rd rate power to maintain it.
If the wormhole had been avalible then it would of crushed the Alpha/Beta quadrent races like insects.
The most powerfull in the milkyway is the Borg. I dont think you can deny that. But the Domnion is deffinatly above the Federation.
Quite frankly though there are vast unexplored areas of the mikyway the dominion were only stmbled on by chance. There may be some other powerfull empires out there.
I also think the Krenim from voyager would have been able to go toe to toe with the Federation.
But the thing is, the Dominion is not on a war footing as the war begins - as per "To the Death", it hasn't fought a credible enemy for two thousand years!
Yet it is obviously the one with the greater overall resources, when even a cut-off beachhead force can (with its own resources and those of a second- or third-rate local power) outproduce the entire Alpha Quadrant so that the mighty Klingon Empire faces 20:1 odds in ship numbers towards the end of the conflict. This despite the Alpha Axis performing several successful strikes against Dominion ship and troop production facilities over the course of the war, including at the very start when the overall balance should be grossly in favor of Alpha forces.
Timo Saloniemi
But when it's established the Dominion does not wage wars, it follows it's very unlikely to have a large standing army.War footing doesn't mean that you are currently or recently engaged in battle but rather that you have a large standing military or dedicate a large portion of your GNP (or interstellar equivalent) to the military in the event of future conflict.
The dialogue references are to about ten thousand years of existence and two thousand years without credible opponents. That would be an obvious recipe for stagnation - especially as the Founders have every motivation not to teach their subject races how to become superior soldiers or build superior weapons! A police state doesn't arm its police with tanks, lest their barrels be turned against the presidential palace; batons, tear grenades, water cannon and submachine guns are plenty enough to deal with the average mass of disgruntled citizens.But if we were being serious, if the Dominion had existed for thousands of years before the Federation (aka space flight and other advanced technology) then how did they not have such a technological advantage to crush the Alpha Quadrant races like roaches?
The thing about the Dominion is that it does not decide. It is not the government, it is the subject and the victim. The Founders lead, and it is in their interests to keep the Dominion weak.So I guess after the Dominion reached a certain point of advancement they just decided to hold firm
Indeed, the breen proved superior in this respect.
apparently, creative solutions to the problem of the week don't scale well to all-out war
Or then their reputed prowess in piracy was due to them having developed this energy-deprivation weapon long ago - and, until late in the Dominion War, having used it only sparingly, in situations where victory and total slaughter of witnesses was assured.Indeed, the breen proved superior in this respect.![]()
This is based on nothing established on screen - and, if such developments were decisive in the war, they would have been mentioned; indeed, you are making the heroes look artificially good rather than naturally bad.If we want to make non-hero crews look good rather than artificially bad, we might argue that creative weekly solutions are constantly being implemented - and canceled out by similar solutions by the enemy. The war might really consist of a long string of tales of ingenuity and unconventional tactics, rather than application of conventional force, and the evident masses of conventional ships and troops might mainly exist as reserves for rapid application whenever a clever use for them is found locally and temporarily.apparently, creative solutions to the problem of the week don't scale well to all-out war
Timo Saloniemi
The Federation developed Dominion-proof shields - and we can rest assured that this happened during the war and not before, because an encounter with the Dominion would be a prerequisite for developing such a thing.Perhaps. But the federation failed to develop such a weapon both before and during the war.
"It" amounts to the development of a range of useful weapon technologies, in no way falling short of what the Breen have achieved in the same timeframe (once we leave out the one big trick from each side). That the Breen would have some inherent advantage over the Federation in developing weapons remains to be demonstrated, beyond this one-trick pony race with a photo finish.it may be a combination of technological inexperience in weapons building and strategic naivete
Nor is the "weekly hero achievements don't represent the big picture" model. And for a very simple reason: most of the Trek universe remains outside our TV screens. This is especially true of the Dominion war, where we were stuck at a quiet side theater (much like the Washington/Richmond theater in the Civil War) for most of the war.This is based on nothing established on screen
Why comment, if they are the only thing that ever happens? It would be pretty natural for the Star Trek universe to operate like Star Trek shows it operating, even when the camera isn't present. While Sisko is at the focus, we know Picard is out there, too. Why not ten thousand Picards commanding ten thousand ships? Some have good days, some have bad days. Unlike Picard during his decade in the limelights, some die, on or off camera. On the average, the universe trundles along.and, if such developments were decisive in the war, they would have been mentioned
At their best, they might live; at anything less, they might die. And Kirk and Picard had off days, too. It would simply be a game of numbers, with more fighting days and more enemies to fight grinding down the Kirks and Picards little by little.Even if we assume it true, it would mean federation captains/engineers are, at their best, no better than jem'hadar a few months old.
Well, that's the problem you lamented a few lines earlier: in Trek, stuff gets forgotten, even though it could easily be written down and translated into an expert program. Why waste 45 minutes coming up with a solution to a hole-in-space or a pissed-off god when you can look up how Kirk did it? And this applies both to the Federation, with a proud 200-year tradition of daring adventures, and the Dominion, with a more sedate but 10,000-year tradition...Who could have known the praised federation creativity can be replicated by genetic memories and a few months practice with them?
It is also worth noting the Breen failed to find a solution to anything, while the Feds at least tackled the phased polaron beam shielding problem.It's worth noting that the federation failed to find a solution to the breen weapon - it needed to steal it in desperation.
This I could agree with, but moderated with the above. Not only did the Feds learn how to protect their ships against ppbs, they learned how to see the Houdinis, how to save somebody hit with the ppb poisons, and how to smoke out and kill Founders - all Founders! That's about the amount of ingenuity you get in a season of TNG, although admittedly spread out over several seasons here.Anyway one looks at this, the dominion war showed the limits of federation ingenuity - far more restricted than previously implied.
And they kicked butt - much like the Americans.The Klingons never seemed to master dentistry.
Much like the British.
They turn up late to the fight in "Sacrifice of Angels" - much like the Americans![]()
^
Given they're vulnerable to Civil War muskets, that's a matter of claim.
^
Given they're vulnerable to Civil War muskets, that's a matter of claim.
Civil war muskets that they conjured into existence themselves. As far as we know, only Q can kill Q.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.