• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Planets. Armed and powered as only a planet can be armed and powered.

Re: Planets. Armed and powered as only a planet can be armed and powe

If that's the case, why didn't the Dominion just lay waste to every major planet in the Alpha Quadrant, especially once they started losing? They didn't care about reprisals and didn't care about killing trillions of solids.

I think they did. Even Dukat seemed shocked by the suggestion that Earth alone might get this treatment, and didn't seem to want it seriously considered.

Dukat, for all his evil, was a humanoid, and like a human, he was from a social species with a genetic predisposition toward working together with other humanoids, even if this predisposition found expression in counter-productive, exploitative, or merely hierarchical ways. The Founders, by contrast, were a unitary creature with no particular evolutionary reason to have developed the trait of mercy, and who had as much concern for humanoids as most humanoids do ants.

And Dukat wasn't the one calling the shots.

The Founders are presented as having a profound fascination with order: few things are less orderly than a dead planet.

The Breen didn't want to wreck some of these worlds, but clearly wanted to control them; that was their whole interest in joining up.
It's difficult to determine how much of their own shots the Breen were calling. They appeared subordinated to the Dominion, but at the same time were given tremendous deference, in contrast to the Cardassians. At any rate, if planet-killer missiles existed, the Dominion surely had their own stocks, maintained by biologically-loyal Jem'Hadar and under the direct control of the Founders.

Probably Dukat thought something similar when he had the Cardassian Union join: that most of the Dominion masters would go back to the Gamma Quadrant and he'd control most of the planets on our side of the wormhole (and/or did he make some hints about overthrowing them at some point?).
He did. Boy, did he get it wrong. You know, you'd think he'd have cared more about Cardassia Prime being lain waste, but that's an issue for another discussion.

And I'm sure the Breen, the Cardassians, and any Founders stuck in places where the alliance could strike at them did fear reprisals in kind. Why wouldn't they?
The Founders were dying. As far as they knew, they would have ceased to existed in short order. It was the perfect, and appropriate, time for massive retaliation.

I bet the Romulans have it in them to do this if they felt they were seriously threatened.
Sure, but, as said, they were dead already, from a biological attack.

The Cardassian "dreadnought" weapon is a clear indication that thinking along these lines does happen, but so far no one's been psycho enough to push the conflicts to that level.
The Cards and Roms did, with their attempt to destroy the Great Link. Apparently, while they recognized that they were bringing war to their respective nations' doorsteps, they didn't seem to fear at all an immediate, certain and total retaliation from the Dominion upon the completion of their mission. From The Die Is Cast, it appears a fully-armed fleet is necessary to prosecute extinction-level attacks.

Timo said:
One wonders what good it would do to destroy a planet. Destroying Earth would not help the Klingons conquer the galaxy, because Starfleet could still retaliate in kind, and keep on hindering the Klingon conquest attempts just like before the loss of Earth. Destroying Earth would only serve to hurt and enrage the Federation - and hurting and enraging are unlikely to be worthwhile strategic goals.

What Klingons (or Romulans, or Cardassians) want is control of all those planets that they now have to share with their competitors. They can't gain control of those planets by destroying them, and they can't gain control of those planets by destroying the homeworlds of the competitors. It's just too risky to try the berserker routine when one is open to retribution; berserking is viable as a first strike, if by "first" one means "we're several centuries or millennia ahead of the victims in terms of space combat capability"...

Planet-busting is no doubt a good blackmail weapon, but only at the highest level. If such blackmail worked on lower levels, then surely New York would have been nuked several times by now, in order to force a favorable outcome in some third world bush war? Planet-busters may be the reason why the Feds agreed to the Treaty of Algeron, but they aren't a weapon of war.

Here we have to distinguish between countervalue and counterforce strikes. Destroying Earth is a countervalue attack (because, presumably, it is what we "value"), and the deterrence theory developed during the Cold War suggests that a first-strike involving countervalue targets is immoral as well as retarded and suicidal, when facing a commensurate enemy.

Counterforce, by contrast, is the targeting of an enemy's deterrence capacity, it's generally seen as amoral, but a power that retains any residual capability of responding will do so, for fear of losing what little capability it has left, against countervalue targets, in order to make the aggressor pay. This is why we fielded and field SSBNs, and used to field airborne bombers. Deterrence theory predicts that survivable methods of mass destruction should be assigned, as a priority, countervalue targets.

Nuclear deterrence theory is a lot like a hostage situation.

The thing is, in Trek, there are nothing but strategic weapons--just about any starship carries as great destructive power as any modern nuclear arsenal. They are treated tactically, but at their root is the possibility that all military force ultimately rests on to be effective--the potential to wipe out something the enemy, or something the enemy cares about. In this case, its scope is strategic: it can destroy an inhabited planet.

Almost every fight we have seen in Trek has involved counterforce targeting almost exclusively--that is, starship vs. starship, or starship vs. sensor array, or whatever. The Die Is Cast is an exception: Tain's task force embarked on a combined counterforce/countervalue mission. Its primary goal seemed to be counterforce--the destruction of the Dominion leadership--as opposed to countervalue--the destruction of the Great Link in and of itself. But as a practical matter it was both (there is some confusion in the real world, if I'm not mistaken, over whether decapitation strikes against highest leadership should be classified as counterforce or countervalue, as well--it ordinarily isn't regarded as a good idea, particularly as it leaves an enemy with its capacity to do harm intact but no one to negotiate with).

This begs the question, if robot missiles exist and are effective, why not use them against the Founder homeworld?

For that matter, even if one is going to operate on a strictly coutnerforce basis, why not use them against starships? They're surely much cheaper than starships, and any war in Trek is going to be playing for strategic stakes right off the bat. So why have no photonic missiles been launched against major starbases, repair yards, antimatter refineries, sensor arrays, communications hubs, and so forth? Why send a ship to do a missile's job--if a missile can do that job?

Warfighters in Trek do generally seem to eschew countervalue attacks, probably for fear of retaliation. When they don't fear it, they sometimes engage in it, for example when Sisko made a Maquis colony world unliveable. Presumably the Federation does have some moral restraints on how far they're willing to go down the countervalue road, although after being hit first, I think it'd be interesting to see what those restraints would be. Perhaps not that many--Nechayev in Descent outright orders Picard to commit genocide on the Borg, if given the chance. Presumably other enemies with similar implacability and unsympathetic natures, like the Founders, would get the same treatment. And in fact they did.

Hey, deterrence, after all, depends on a credible threat, not just the bare capacity.

The Founders, at any rate, had zero moral qualms about mass-murder. They freely engaged in it by bombing their own capital in the Alpha Quadrant from orbit.

So, the question here is, why didn't they do that to other planets?

Firstly, we don't really know they didn't. It's possible that they did, just not any planets we care about, and that they were prevented from doing this to "important" worlds.

Beyond that, up until they became aware of the virus, they might have been afraid to, out of self-preservation.

Afterward, however, they had no incentive to hold back, and every reason (indeed, even rational reason) to undertake countervalue operations against the humanoids who had already undertaken one against them, with biological instead of photonic weapons.

The answer must lie in impossibility. They must not have had the means to strike. If cheap, disposable interstellar cloaked ballistic missiles (ICBMs, of course--except I guess they're not really ballistic) exist and are as effective as our own nuclear missiles, then there is no reason to expect that the Dominion wouldn't have used them in their final hours (at least, before belatedly realizing that Odo did have a cure). Neither deterrence nor humanitarian concerns would have had an ounce of bearing on their decision to use, or not to use, such weapons. Only possibility and practicality.
 
Re: Planets. Armed and powered as only a planet can be armed and powe

The Founders are presented as having a profound fascination with order: few things are less orderly than a dead planet.

I think the difficult and time-consuming steps of conquering and genetically reengineering many species to serve their ends suggests that they don't have such a simple view of order.

The Founders were dying. As far as they knew, they would have ceased to existed in short order. It was the perfect, and appropriate, time for massive retaliation.

A few points on that: the main body was in the Gamma Quadrant, and since the good guys controlled the wormhole, I don't know that the Dominion had any way to communicate back through it. The female Changeling was on this side, and was sick, but her orders appeared to be dictating a "pull back and rebuild" fortress strategy rather than a "go down swinging" strategy, suggesting that she didn't want to try and wipe out as many planets as she could on the way out just because she might not get another chance. However, it is possible the Breen attack was meant to be damaging on that scale, and simply didn't succeed. Another factor: if Alliance involvement in the sickness was suspected, world-ending attacks might be getting rid of your cure, or the people who would know how to make it.

This begs the question, if robot missiles exist and are effective, why not use them against the Founder homeworld?

I think for the few factions that might actually employ them, they must be highly resource-intensive and yet not especially effective at passing the kinds of defenses commonly in place. After seeing the M5 experiment and similar threats from thinking computers, I am not too surprised that plenty of people in the Trek universe end up reluctant to build a flying superbomb that is capable of outthinking countermeasures and defending itself effectively, because the damn thing is so dangerous and could very well go into business for itself a la Skynet or something. The Cardassian "Dreadnought" weapon was clearly a big step forward toward such a thing...and terrorists stole it and tried to turn it against its masters! The Dominion could have crewed such a thing with suicidal Jem'Hadar, but those have been known to disobey orders too...I wonder how much the Founders ultimately trusted any solid to do any damn thing.

For that matter, even if one is going to operate on a strictly coutnerforce basis, why not use them against starships? They're surely much cheaper than starships, and any war in Trek is going to be playing for strategic stakes right off the bat. So why have no photonic missiles been launched against major starbases, repair yards, antimatter refineries, sensor arrays, communications hubs, and so forth? Why send a ship to do a missile's job--if a missile can do that job?

It is possible some were, and Rick Sternbach's Cardassian "heavy penetrator" design may be an example; he posted a scan of the design sketch right here on this BBS, and mentioned them on his chart of the Cardassian war industry output in the DS9 Technical Manual.

The answer must lie in impossibility. They must not have had the means to strike. If cheap, disposable interstellar cloaked ballistic missiles (ICBMs, of course--except I guess they're not really ballistic) exist and are as effective as our own nuclear missiles, then there is no reason to expect that the Dominion wouldn't have used them in their final hours (at least, before belatedly realizing that Odo did have a cure). Neither deterrence nor humanitarian concerns would have had an ounce of bearing on their decision to use, or not to use, such weapons. Only possibility and practicality.

It is not necessarily true that they'd have wanted to go down swinging rather than use the threat of the weapons to negotiate a peace or for the cure or whatever, but regardless, it is still very plausible at that point in the war that they just didn't have what they needed available to get such weapons into the mix. (I don't think such a thing would be particularly cheap if it were to have a serious chance of succeeding.) Perhaps construction of some more weapons like this was one of the major goals in the "retreat and rebuild" plan.

The proliferation of cloaking technology would seem to be a really big factor in the way this sort of thing would play out, and when we think about it this way, it is perhaps more understandable how the Treaty of Algeron seems to have shown the Romulans to be focused on that very issue.
 
Re: Planets. Armed and powered as only a planet can be armed and powe

Those are some great points, JNG. Particularly about the Founders' concept of order--I'll concede that.

It's not that I really think that cloaked antimatter missiles don't seem possible...

It's that the writers (with certain limited exceptions) apparently didn't want them to be possible, or be considered at all when watching or thinking about the show. And I can see why: a show about people launching or considering launching missiles at one another over light years of distance, well, it could work, but it's not Star Trek.

But since a cloak + a probe + a warhead does seem to = easy planet-killer, I'm just doing my best to rationalize why or how it wouldn't work. :)

I don't think fear of reprisal alone is quite enough to do the trick.
 
Re: Planets. Armed and powered as only a planet can be armed and powe

I wouldn't use the choice of crewed rather than automated starships in "The Die is Cast" as evidence that interstellar missiles don't exist. A missile has the built-in potential of missing its one and only shot. Starships must achieve the same as missiles as regards penetrating enemy defenses - but once they get there, they can do damage assessment and shifting of destructive resources, a capacity that in certain cases will outweigh the inferior rate of destruction and the greater commitment of certain resources. If the first volley is successful in suppressing defenses, then starships can proceed with additional volleys to complete xenocide, while expending relatively few resources; missiles would be less economical, as one would expend entire missiles on each successive volley, too, not just cheap ammo.

And let's not mistake interstellar missiles for cheap ammo: as said, in order to penetrate defenses they have to be starships themselves, in terms of range, speed, firepower, protection, and/or stealth. Even the latter aspect does seem to require major resources: cloaking of tiny objects against sensor scrutiny has never really been done in Trek, so we might plead technological problems, making it impossible to send cheap firecrackers through defenses by virtue of stealth alone.

A xenocidal attack would probably best be pressed home if the first wave were expendable, allowing the most valuable resources to stand off, but the later waves were crewed and had persisting power. But if cheap missiles don't exist, then the choice between expensive missiles and expensive starships for the first wave becomes subject to other considerations.

The Tal'Shiar and Obsidian Order wanted to be certain. Had they launched missiles, their attack might have been less than complete, exposing them to retaliation - and the whole point of the attack was to preempt retaliation (definitely a "counterforce" strike here, considering what was known or at least believed of the way the Dominion functioned). So they chose starships, which would have been the correct choice if not for the unfortunate fact that it was a trap.

Despite the trap, "The Die is Cast" proved that raining extinction from outer space is perfectly viable; the planet did die, and the fleet was even doing much better than they expected, presumably because they encountered no resistance. So I don't think it is fruitful to try and argue that interstellar missiles are technologically unviable as a category. We already have to invent an argument for why starship fleets are not used to xenocidal ends more often than shown, so this argument should automatically cover the non-use of missiles as well, without requiring a technological excuse at all.

All other arguments are welcome, though. ;)

Timo Saloniemi
 
Re: Planets. Armed and powered as only a planet can be armed and powe

^ While not a starship we have seen that the Federation was able to build cloaked mines that were what, a metre across? They were specifically designed with a cloak to stop the Dominion fleet from picking them off and in that case it was thought that their small size would mean they would be harder for the Dominion to detect.

We also have the mentioning of a Klingon class 4 cloaking device, which was specifically designed for the use on small vessels. The Maquis then pretended that they had equipped missiles with them and launched them at Cardassia so they would have to be warp capable missiles. It was a serious enough threat that Sisko turned to Eddington to solve the situation before the missiles hit.
 
Re: Planets. Armed and powered as only a planet can be armed and powe

Starships are inherently weapons of mass destruction.

Lets not forget that even TOS had Kirk beaming an antimatter container in Obsession ("an ounce should be sufficient") to rip off most of a planet's atmosphere, and leave a heckuva crater on CGI. All you'd need is clean shot at transport, something our heroes have been able to do with many hostile planets (Romulus, anyone?) and you've left a bit of a surprise.

No seven-minute-Thaleron warmup needed here.

Oh, and Soran could blow up a sun with a small probe.

So in-universe, planets are large, easy to find, locationally hard to hide, targets. Suns may be similar. I'm postulating lots of layered defenses and a general shield against planetary transport.

Or alternatively, Starfleet or some other defense force plus treaties that essentially guarantee mutually assured destruction to any aggressor. If you can determine who that might be. Or some general "we'll take out half the quadrant" understanding if a genocidal event occurs.
 
Re: Planets. Armed and powered as only a planet can be armed and powe

^In trilithium's case, it may be more like nuclear weapons in real life, where obtaining the material is arguably more difficult than constructing a weapon out of it.
 
Re: Planets. Armed and powered as only a planet can be armed and powe

^That was my impression, as well.
 
Re: Planets. Armed and powered as only a planet can be armed and powe

Lets not forget that even TOS had Kirk beaming an antimatter container in Obsession ("an ounce should be sufficient") to rip off most of a planet's atmosphere, and leave a heckuva crater on CGI. All you'd need is clean shot at transport, something our heroes have been able to do with many hostile planets (Romulus, anyone?) and you've left a bit of a surprise.


Oh, and Soran could blow up a sun with a small probe.

So in-universe, planets are large, easy to find, locationally hard to hide, targets. Suns may be similar. I'm postulating lots of layered defenses and a general shield against planetary transport.

They did cover their behind about antimatter requiring special procedures to beam safely. It is possible there would be major problems trying to do it through a cloak without being detected (or without setting it off or something).

As for the trilithium, the Romulans seemed to me to be risking war to get their hands on some in ST: Generations. We know they use trilithium isotopes in some of their weapons, and this must be an area where their research is heavily focused. With Soran's tech, a cloaked ship could indeed release a small probe near a star and get out of there without being detected. Scary.
 
Re: Planets. Armed and powered as only a planet can be armed and powe

Didn't the Bashir Founder trying to destroy the Bajoran star possess a bomb containing trilithium and protomatter? Overkill, much?
 
Re: Planets. Armed and powered as only a planet can be armed and powe

Maybe the deterrent is that all the major powers have secret caches of superweapons (biogenic, smart missles, Sun Crushers, etc.) hidden throughout the galaxy that, in the case of a genocidal attack, retaliation is immediate and complete....think MAD on a galactic scale...


A storyline where a group of rebels (Maqui/Vulcan dissidents/rogue Borg/Remans/etc.) find and steal a cache would make for a great movie.....(hint, hint, Mr. Abrams :techman: )
 
Re: Planets. Armed and powered as only a planet can be armed and powe

Didn't the Bashir Founder trying to destroy the Bajoran star possess a bomb containing trilithium and protomatter? Overkill, much?

And tekasite, for a smoky flavor.
 
Re: Planets. Armed and powered as only a planet can be armed and powe

I can offer a possibility for a planetary defense from cloaked weapons. We know that no cloak is perfect (whatever Nemesis tells us) and that antiproton searchlights are rather effective against cloaks, probably due to gamma ray leak or whatever from annihilation reactions taking place beyond the "event horizon" of the cloak. We also know that this can be countered, and the leak contained by "adjusting the resonance frequency of the floak," whatever that means, but perhaps not with large enough quantities of antiprotons.

So I suggest that satellite constellations are constantly beaming antiproton searchlights into near-planetary space, creating a critical antiproton density that even the best cloaks cannot hope to hide from. This density would not enough to case actual harm, but enough to give ample warning for planetary deflector shields and anti-torpedo point defenses to destroy any intruder. Presumably every major homeworld and colony has this rather cheap detection grid (mechanically, it's just a bunch of antimatter bottles on a slow and controlled leak, coupled with short-range subspace sensors that can tell the generation of a photon pattern consistent with a cloaked object at FTL speeds--it may be magic to us, but the Pakleds could do it in Trek).

Crewed ships holding long-term station may avoid such problems by staying out of the searchlight patterns, by studying taking advantage, in the case of war, of weaknesses in the defense network, and by being able to actively attack and defend against point defenses. Their advantages in comparison to cloaked long-range torpedoes would allow for much greater destruction at less cost.

One may argue that a warping long-range torpedo would be too fast for the defense network to deal with, if not merely detect. I would submit that the higher the warp factor, the less effectively cloaked the object would be. There may be a happy medium, but tactically significant multiples of the speed of light may just give the torpedo away quicker than the antiproton searchlights.
 
Re: Planets. Armed and powered as only a planet can be armed and powe

^Also there's some question about "going to warp within a solar system" and what exactly that means, enough so maybe it isn't typically possible for something to warp straight at a planet (at least without giving itself away too soon).

I would figure tachyon sensor net except that it seemed to be kind of a new idea when they used it on TNG, but other forms of sensor net seemed to be in use before that and are presumably capable of protecting a limited area. The Federation was using a gravitic sensor net on the Romulan border before the tachyon business was developed.

Data also once pulled a trick with illuminating cloaked ships by detonating photon torpedoes on one of the preexisting settings, and did this in a way that didn't seem to damage the ships so illuminated.

Antiprotons and tachyons seem to be the go-to technobabble for cloak penetration. :techman:
 
Re: Planets. Armed and powered as only a planet can be armed and powe

Wll at least antiprotons are a)real and b)could have the effect of illuminating a target...:p
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top