Might I learn where this is established on-screen, please?estrea said:
Since Vulcans are supposed to be pacifists,...
Photon said:
Vulcans had ships and didn't think twice about attacking the Andorians.
Nebusj said:
Might I learn where this is established on-screen, please?estrea said:
Since Vulcans are supposed to be pacifists,...
Agreed. Not everybody in the Federation wants to join Starfleet, so it stands to reason that any ships a planet may have had prior to joining the Federation, would continue to serve locally, perhaps, under the administration of the Federation outpost or embassy on the planet.I see no reason to think that Federation Member States wouldn't retain their own local militias, though I imagine that there may be a provision for integrating them into the Starfleet heirarchy if they're called into "federal" service, a la the US National Guard system.
Agreed. Not everybody in the Federation wants to join Starfleet, so it stands to reason that any ships a planet may have had prior to joining the Federation, would continue to serve locally, perhaps, under the administration of the Federation outpost or embassy on the planet.![]()
Not trying to be argumentative, but wasn't Sarek the ambassador from Vulcan to Earth/Terra in ST:VI?
In the scene where there was also two other ambassadors representing non-Federation worlds: Klingon and Romulan.
Other duties of embassies include: trade negotiations, visas, and non-violent activities (although at this time in Terran history, you can bet your last dollar a fair amount of spying still goes on...)
I see no reason to think that Federation Member States wouldn't retain their own local militias
The continued presence of the Romulan Ambassador in the Presidential Office during the Starfleet briefing on a plan to invade Klingon space did NOT make sense, because Starfleet would never want to leak that to a hostile foreign government.
And embassies between the Federation and its Member States, and between the Member States, would be as defunct as the US Embassy to Texas, or as a Kentucky Embassy to Colorado.
Lisa Cusack: "...We met on Andor. I was assigned to the Federation Embassy as an attache and he was working in the Andorian Agricultural Ministry."
TIMO:
But apparently the Federation does. Else why insist on this in the case of Bajor?
The creation of local militia forces in the US Federal setup was with the explicit intention of allowing the States to wage separatist war if they didn't like something the Feds did, now wasn't it?
Not all Federal setups would choose to cater for civil war.
"If the member world doesn't accept a defense force loyal to the central government, it doesn't get a defense force at all" sounds like an effective system for maintaining internal as well as external security and stability...
TIMO:
SCI:
The presence of the Klingon Ambassador to the UFP made sense, since the Federation President was trying to negotiate with them. The presence of the Romulan Ambassador to the UFP made sense for part of that scene, since President Ra-ghoratreii no doubt wanted the Romulan government's take on things later on. The continued presence of the Romulan Ambassador in the Presidential Office during the Starfleet briefing on a plan to invade Klingon space did NOT make sense, because Starfleet would never want to leak that to a hostile foreign government.
OTOH, if Romulus were a friendly foreign government, and a key ally in the planned war with the Klingon Empire, then having their representative present in a war council would make good sense.
Yes. And embassies between the Federation and its Member States, and between the Member States, would be as defunct as the US Embassy to Texas, or as a Kentucky Embassy to Colorado.
That would be the simple and sensible approach. Then again, there's this bit from DS9 "The Sound of Her Voice":
What is that UFP Embassy doing on Andor, a well-established member world?
I can see the use for UFP "outlets" on member worlds, for purposes of interacting with the Federal government. But to call them Embassies seems to suggest a system different from the US Federal setup - and might give new meaning to the occasions where we hear member world Ambassadors acting on what seem like internal UFP affairs (the fact-finding mission in "Journey to Babel", Sarek's counsel to various UFP leaders).
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.