Six months passed between 3 and 4, the Council would have had to argue the case for most of that. The recall to Earth was probably because they had just reached their decision days before.
The Enterprise-A did have major systems issues, but the extent of the refit itself to the new Constitution design might not have worked on every ship. It might have been a ship that always had problems since 2273 and had undergone yet another refit to try and clear them, resulting in a 'blank' ship for the time being.
I think the Council's decision to give them the new ship was just for show, they never expected it to go on for too long. The decommissioning in Star Trek 6 would have been to finally get rid of the damn thing and make way for the proper Enterprise (B).
The original plan (in universe I mean) might have been to have a gap between the loss of the 1701 and the launch of the Excelsior class replacement with a totally new registry number.
Kirk's always has to meddle though...
The Enterprise-A did have major systems issues, but the extent of the refit itself to the new Constitution design might not have worked on every ship. It might have been a ship that always had problems since 2273 and had undergone yet another refit to try and clear them, resulting in a 'blank' ship for the time being.
I think the Council's decision to give them the new ship was just for show, they never expected it to go on for too long. The decommissioning in Star Trek 6 would have been to finally get rid of the damn thing and make way for the proper Enterprise (B).
The original plan (in universe I mean) might have been to have a gap between the loss of the 1701 and the launch of the Excelsior class replacement with a totally new registry number.
Kirk's always has to meddle though...