What about Kirk's backstory, as used for reference by the TOS writers which said Kirk worked up the ranks serving on destroyers and frigates. What's a destroyer, if not a warship?the fact that Starfleet building warships is almost unheard of
What about Kirk's backstory, as used for reference by the TOS writers which said Kirk worked up the ranks serving on destroyers and frigates. What's a destroyer, if not a warship?the fact that Starfleet building warships is almost unheard of
If you're accepting the TOS writer's bible as evidence in itself without the information having to be included in an actual episode as aired, then you don't even need to infer from that particular bit, because it directly addresses the question of whether NCC-1701 is a military vessel:What about Kirk's backstory, as used for reference by the TOS writers which said Kirk worked up the ranks serving on destroyers and frigates. What's a destroyer, if not a warship?
Is the starship U.S.S. Enterprise a military vessel?
Yes, but only semi-military in practice -- omitting features which are heavily authoritarian. For example, we are not aware of "officers" and "enlisted men" categories. And we avoid saluting and other annoying medieval leftovers. On the other hand, we do keep a flavor of Naval usage and terminology to help encourage believability and identification by the audience. After all, our own Navy today still retains remnants of tradition known to Nelson and Drake.
The TNG writer's guide says the Enterprise D is less of a battleship than the original, so there you have it, Roddenberry himself called the original Enterprise a battleship. Indeed, it's mentioned frequently the intent is to make TNG less militaristic than TOS and its movies.Now, what does the TNG writer's guide say about NCC-1701-D? What does ENT's say about NX-01? (I don't have copies of any of them to check for myself; the above bit is quoted in The Making Of Star Trek.)
Well, half a battleship, in practice, anyway. Guess that means the "D" is ≤49% battleship, then.The TNG writer's guide says the Enterprise D is less of a battleship than the original, so there you have it, Roddenberry himself called the original Enterprise a battleship.
Does it say anything about Starfleet in general? Is that one online anywhere? Thanks for the link to the TNG one, BTW.The Enterprise writer's guide only provide technical details about the NX-01, it's crew complement, shuttlepods and warp 5 speed limit.
Despite the indisputable and amply evident fact that it's "something they do" I am not aware of any historical military organization whose stated primary purpose for existing was exploration, though. They exist to defend territorial interests and fight wars, and the exploration they carry out and participate in is incidental to this purpose. Conversely, it seems to me that up to Archer's time at least, Starfleet existed to explore and seek out new life, and any participation in defense and fighting they undertook was incidental to this purpose. The fact that their ships were well-armed and their organizational structure superficially based upon that of a navy (no doubt due to the similar need for discipline that Malcolm points out in "Singularity") does not in itself constitute strong evidence against this.
True, but go back far enough and we had barely if any defined military forces at all, only what could be scraped together ad hoc, and relying heavily on civilian militias.
Since specific comparisons to the U.S. Navy and Coast Guard have been raised by others, let's review the early history of those. During the Revolutionary War the Continental Navy (whose authorization was met with staunch vocal objection in the Continental Congress to begin with) initially consisted of a few converted merchant ships, later joined by 13 newly-constructed frigates, and eventually other vessels that were chartered/loaned/captured, only a handful of which survived the war, following which the entire operation was disbanded and they were sold off.
Their motto in ENT is "semper exploro" ("always exploring") as seen on flags in several episodes including "The Expanse," "Home," "The Forge," "Demons," and "Terra Prime"; Picard cites before the court in "The Measure Of A Man" that "Starfleet was founded to seek out new life" and in "Peak Performance" that "its purpose is exploration." It seems a bit like we're going around in circles here, doesn't it?Do we ever actually see a mission statement for starfleet? I'm actually struggling to think of an instance (although I have been up 24 hours straight. "to boldly go, explore strange new worlds, etc" specifically refers to the Enterprise in every instance we have heard it delivered.
Starfleet was created in peacetime; peacetime is all there was for decades prior to its inception, and peacetime is all there had been during its existence at the time ENT begins. For what particular reason would it have been authorized and founded as a force intended to fight wars, at least openly so, if there are none to be fought? As I've said, I can believe there were those who thought it might eventually need to be one, and even those who might have wanted it to be one, but would they have won out in whatever debate surrounded its conception, beyond getting Section 31 included in its charter and the laying of some basic structural framework under the rationale of it being ostensibly and plausibly for other purposes, such as armaments for self-defense and naval ranks to preserve discipline?In peacetime starfleet focus a great deal of attention on exploration, as do pretty much all navies throughout history
If we don't see or hear about them on the show, I don't see why we should assume they exist, or that they are operated by Starfleet if they do. The Vulcans could be patrolling our borders for us as their protectorate, more or less, and the Earth Cargo Service seems to be fending for itself against pirates without much if any help from Starfleet, from what we see. (Also, while I'm sure some countries today do have their borders patrolled by military forces, the U.S. Border Patrol is civilian.)but what we don't see so much on the show are all the smaller more utilitarian vessels which will doubtless include border patrols, vessels on anti piracy missions and the like, ie roles more commonly associated with the moniker "military".
Again, Starfleet was chartered before the Federation existed, at a time when there were no wars to be fought, and had been none for decades, and would be none for decades. When an existential outside threat to Earth did present itself in the form of the Xindi, we saw Earth's military—a distinct and separate uniformed body from Starfleet—brought on board to deal with it, in spite of the fact that by that point Starfleet arguably already had more "hands on" experience in such matters thanks to various encounters they'd had while carrying out their functions of exploration and seeking out new life. That's what we actually see on the show.the exploration angle is pretty much redundant to my mind. Yes it's clearly a large part of what they do and the focus of much of the show but they are also the wartime arm of the federation and the only uniformed body we have seen pitted against external threats.
Sorry, maybe I should have been a bit more explicit. I think these points might be relevant:Not sure where you are going with this
So, in your opinion—this question having been skirted around a few times now—all the U.S. federal agencies doing this today that are not recognized by the government as being military forces, are in fact military forces? (See FBI, CIA, ATF, DSS, Secret Service, etc.) Their actual purposes as intended and established have no bearing on the matter, it's only that they are armed and authorized to use deadly force that counts? Do I take it you have no use for the term "paramilitary" either?Whether the American government of the time recognised it as such is largely immaterial, they were an armed force using deadly force on behalf of a nation, thus a military
What about Kirk's backstory, as used for reference by the TOS writers which said Kirk worked up the ranks serving on destroyers and frigates. What's a destroyer, if not a warship?
The TNG writer's guide says the Enterprise D is less of a battleship than the original, so there you have it, Roddenberry himself called the original Enterprise a battleship. Indeed, it's mentioned frequently the intent is to make TNG less militaristic than TOS and its movies.
(1) We didn't always have a navy, as one wasn't always considered necessary, and even when one did become necessary there was significant resistance within the governmental body to establishing and/or maintaining one.
(2) While the U.S. Coast Guard is a military organization, many or all of its antecedent services were civilian ones.
The terms destroyer and frigate have never been canonically established for Starfleet vessels, much less for the ships that Kirk served on for his early career.
I agree it is a plausible scenario and have never meant to suggest otherwise in anything I have said, but in point of fact no, it was never spelled out. Very little about the war has been, beyond what Spock says in "Balance Of Terror":Someone check me on this.
It was Starfleet that fought the Romulan War during the 22nd century, and it wasn't a case of Earth creating (or already having) a separate military organization that fought the war while Starfleet either sat to the side or at best provided some support.
Or maybe it was never spelled out.
And I mean on the show, not in some book.
And so why can't the above apply equally (in an analogous sense) to the situation in Archer's time? Why would the military need its own standing fleet of ships in peacetime, if it anticipated being able to make use of Starfleet's (and perhaps others) when need arose?There weren't many people who thought the US would never need a navy, they had just needed one in the Revolution, after all. What was in question was whether they could afford to maintain a peacetime fleet, or just assemble a naval force converted from merchant shipping...
...they could always be "drafted" into the navy in wartime, and often were because of the small size of the peacetime navies.
You missed the bit where soon after the Naval Act of 1794 was passed, Congress decided to ransom the Algerian pirates' captives instead, and amended it to halt construction of those frigates if this resulted in peace. That peace and halting of construction occurred in 1796, and it was not until after further debate that it was resumed only on the three vessels furthest along, and not until 1798 that completion of the rest was authorized. No U.S. naval vessel actually set sail until 1798.American ships began to be captured in the Mediterranean in 1785, ratification of the Constitution began in 1787, the first Congress met in 1789 and the act to build the first six frigates was in 1794, so the time without a navy was pretty short.
But Americas martime borders (more analogist to Star Trek's environment) are patroled by the US Coast Guard, ships and aircraft. And other branches of the armed services participate in surveillance and intercepts.Also, while I'm sure some countries today do have their borders patrolled by military forces,
the U.S. Border Patrol is civilian
You missed the bit where soon after the Naval Act of 1794 was passed, Congress decided to ransom the Algerian pirates' captives instead, and amended it to halt construction of those frigates if this resulted in peace. That peace and halting of construction occurred in 1796, and it was not until after further debate that it was resumed only on the three vessels furthest along, and not until 1798 that completion of the rest was authorized. No U.S. naval vessel actually set sail until 1798.
(Also, as I neglected to mention in my previous post, the initial objections to having a standing navy weren't solely fiscal ones, although that was as you say the elephant in the room; others included that it would too imperialistic and construed as provocative to the superior European powers.)
Agreed about Kirk, but Starfleet "frigates" were mentioned in TNG "Conspiracy" and "destroyer units" in DS9 during the Dominion war. It was TMoST that said Kirk had previously commanded a "destroyer-class" ship.
The Making of Star TrekWhat is "TMoST"?
Okay. Two questions. Is a frigate always a military vessel? Were the DS9 destroyer units referring to specific ships or fleets of ships? (Also, during DS9, they were at war, so Starfleet was acting like a military at that point, regardless of wether that was in reality or not.)
What is "TMoST"?
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