In an earlier draft of the script "Sido-Dyas" (no, I didn't misspell that) was indeed just a false identity of Sidious. Kenobi hadn't heard of him and Windu confirmed there was no Jedi by that name. Presumably this was changed to make is a *bit* more credible that the high council would take control of an army commissioned by one of their number and not some unknown pretender who is clearly up to no good.I always thought there never actually WAS a Sifo-Dyas and it was a false identity used by Dooku (or perhaps even Sidious) to hide the true origin of the clone army.
If you're interested, there are two different Sifo-Dyas stories, one from the old pre-Disney Legends continuity, and the current canon version from The Clone Wars.Oh. Well I've never seen that show so I'm just going by what we see in the films.
My suspicion was also stoked by the similarity in names of "Sifo-Dyas" and "Sidious".![]()
All that said, even after some of this being explained in TCW I'm still confused as to the exact sequence of events. How & when did Sidious become aware of Sifo-Dyas's secret commissioning of the clone army? Did he give him the idea in the first place? When did Tyranus take over? And how the hell did Sifo-Dyas pay for all of that?
I know the 'Plagueis' novel covered at least some of this, but that's not canon and according to Pablo, not in-line with Lucas's notes on the matter. (I never was crazy about the idea of Plagueis still kicking by the events of TPM anyway.)
If I had to guess I'd say Sifo-Dyas placed the order a little while before TPM (a few months to a year), right after they kicked him off the high council. Sidious had him killed by the Pykes right around that time (a matter of days or weeks before TPM) and shortly after becoming Chancellor, had his new apprentice Tyranus (who he'd been grooming/courting since before he left the order, as he would later do with Anakin) recruit Jango and present him to Kaminoans, claiming to be working at Sifo-Dyas's behest.
The gap between placing the order and having the template show up can be easily explained by the Kaminoans needing some lead time to gear up for such a massive logistical undertaking before they'd be ready to start actually growing the clones.
Clearly the funds came from Sidious though his contacts in the commerce guilds (most likely embezzled) but it's still a bit of a mystery how Sifo-Dyas would have convinced the Kaminoans that the money would be forthcoming. I mean it hardly seems likely they take him at his word without at least dropping Couruscant a line to check his credit rating, no?
The only thing I can think of is that Palpatine was a lot more directly involved at this stage than we've been made aware, perhaps directly giving Sifo-Dyas access to the Banking Clan accounts?
He may or may not have placed the actual order (Sidious or someone on his payroll could've just used his name).
It sounds like Sifo-Dyas was killed and impersonated by Dooku in order to get access to the army. Who placed the order is unknown, it seems, but I would tend to agree that the Jedi Master Sifo-Dyas did before being killed and impersonated by Dooku, possibly through intermediaries so the Kaminoans wouldn't know Sifo-Dyas by sight.Yeah, TCW confirmed that Sifo-Dyas was killed before TMP. He may or may not have placed the actual order (Sidious or someone on his payroll could've just used his name). However, the fact that Dooku recruited Jango Fett and was secretly working with the Kamionoans to install the Protocol 66 chips (per TCW: Lost Missions), it's a good bet that the Sith took over as the "customers" after the order was placed. (We don't know, though, if some or all the Kaminoans were "in" on the Sith's plot or assumed that Dooku was part of the Jedi Order managing a classified part of the army "programming."
Given that the military (such that it was) of the Republic was operated by the office of the Chancellor, I'm sure Palpatine could have slowly increased the funding to ensure the army was well funded during its development.I imagine that Sidious himself placed the "order" ("10,000 clones to be delivered in a decade and coke and fries to go, please!") through one of his apprentices, perhaps Dooku or another co-opted Jedi, using the name "Sifo Diyas" as cover. No doubt the sith lords planning a centuries long campaign of overthrowng the jedi could bankroll a clone army or two.
Or even the senate could have funded it through one of their black projects with Sidious secretly funneling some of it to Kamino.
fireproof78 said:I know that the Legends EU has Sifo-Dyas forseeing problems for the Republic and planning on the army with the Sith stepping in shortly after.
Indeed. It's made all the more frustrating when his identity and role in the Clone Army were promised to be revealed in the AOTC commentary by Lucas only for that to go by the wayside in ROTS.The frustrating thing about the relevant Legends EU on the subject - at least the part I'm familiar with, namely the James Luceno books Labyrinth of Evil and Darth Plagueis - was that it strongly implied the above while somewhat conspicuously stopping short of confirming it with 100% certainty.
I heard one commentator put it this way:I don't mind the mystery of was it truly Sifo Duas who made the order, or what level of manipulation was involved.
2 main concerns are the funding of it, and why the Jedi so readily accepted the Clone Army, when it had suspicious beginnings, and Mace Windy killed the template.
And, no, I'm not going to assume that someone did that.
Ithekro said:The Council was going to investigate the matter but the crisis spiraled out of control too quickly for them to act, and instead they had to react to the crisis and used the tools provided. The Jedi Council, specifically Yoda, knew something was wrong, but also knew they could not truly investigate the issued until the Clone Wars had ended
It sounds like Sifo-Dyas was killed and impersonated by Dooku in order to get access to the army. Who placed the order is unknown, it seems, but I would tend to agree that the Jedi Master Sifo-Dyas did before being killed and impersonated by Dooku, possibly through intermediaries so the Kaminoans wouldn't know Sifo-Dyas by sight.
Given that the military (such that it was) of the Republic was operated by the office of the Chancellor, I'm sure Palpatine could have slowly increased the funding to ensure the army was well funded during its development.
I do wonder if the clone army was a plan all along, with Palpatine looking in to cloning for multiple purposes, and deciding that the clones might be useful if perfected as a technology. The time line is one that I find a bit more muddled and would appreciate some more clarity with. I know that the Legends EU has Sifo-Dyas forseeing problems for the Republic and planning on the army with the Sith stepping in shortly after.
That's fair, but there isn't much evidence that they did investigated anything. If they did, it may have accomplished little but I would have liked to seen some effort from the Jedi. Again, I credit the novelization for giving som hints that they almost found the Sith Lord and tracked him to the Chancellor's office. The novel givs the Jedi more credit than the films do.To assume that nobody did anything about it at all is equally speculative and unsupported by evidence.
Which one did you mean?We do not know for a fact that they did not investigate. In Legends EU it was said specifically that Yoda investigated the matter. The problem is that their opponent is not the careless type. There is no trail of bread crumbs lying around, no smoking gun waiting to be found if only they would have done something. It is not that simple. Investigation would likely have hit dead ends.
That's fair, but there isn't much evidence that they did investigated anything.
If they did, it may have accomplished little but I would have liked to seen some effort from the Jedi.
I don't think the Jedi would have found anything if they had "done something"
Ok, fair point. But, it doesn't change the fact that they appear in the films to just fall in to the general/military role, when Mace argues that they are "keepers of the peace, not soldiers". However, by the end of the film, they are soldiers, with the Jedi leading troopers in to battle.Appeal to ignorance fallacy.
I would have liked to see them go to the bathroom once in a while. Holding it in for the entire duration of the prequel trilogy can't have been good for their Force ability and thus likely contributed to the rise of the Empire.
So, to follow your argument, if the outcome is the same, we should not be shown the Jedi trying to be protagonists? We should just assume they did the thing, it didn't affect anything, and they blindly accepted being generals and got killed?So in other words the outcome would have been the same... meaning that (according to this premise) what we ultimately see on screen is identical to what we would see if we were able to look into the alternate timeline where the Jedi had gotten off their lazy asses, given a shit and actually done something.
I mean, it's almost as if ROTS is a film set in that timeline!
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