If an organization "acts like a military" they are a military.(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.)
If an organization "acts like a military" they are a military.(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.)
The Revenue Cutter Service was a civilian law enforcement agency established under the Department of the Teasury to enforce tariffs, not an explicitly military one as the Coast Guard was when created through merging the former with the Life-Saving Service (also civilian) in 1915. The fact that it fell to them to engage in the Quasi-War (it was called that for a reason) with France resulted from them being the only extant and available force that could, not because it was their intended purpose, much as I would argue that it fell to Starfleet to represent Earth's interests beyond exploration in the 22nd century.The (precurser to) US Coast Guard was created in 1790. It fell to them to protect US civilian shipping.
Existence without even a single ship on the open water until 24 May 1798 when U.S.S. Ganges, a converted merchantman, set sail. "Tiny" is a bit of an understatement.Tiny though it was, the naval establishment of 1794 stayed in continuous existence
If an organization "acts like a military" they are a military.
Paramilitary forces have the structures of militaries and can act as or in conjunction with military forces in times of war under the laws of war as they stand today. This doesn't mean they are to be considered military forces when they aren't. And at what point after Starfleet's establishment and prior to the Dominion War in DS9 do we have evidence of either United Earth or the United Federation of Planets having been in a state of "total war" at all?Just a thought to consider though, if they operate on the scale of a military, fulfill the role of a military, have the structure of a military and serve a society which even during total war makes no attempt to supersede them with another more dedicated body, how does that differ from being a military? Why given the choice would you deprive them of that status?
1. Yes.
2. Groups of destroyers, apparently.
3. The Making of Star Trek, 1968 book by Stephen Whitfield and Gene Roddenberry.
If an organization "acts like a military" they are a military.
While I agree, it should be noted that what is reproduced in the book is from the "writer's bible" used as a guide for writers on TOS, so it did inform the fiction even if it never was made explicit on the show and can thus be readily disregarded if one so chooses.3. Not canonical.
No.Could frigates and destroyers be built and used by a non-military organization, or at least the names be reused for other ships?
No.is it possible to have non-military organizations fight in wars?
No.
No.
No.
No.
Could frigates and destroyers be built and used by a non-military organization, or at least the names be reused for other ships?
Why not, exactly?
Quite so.Starfleet does have a lot of naval traditions built into it.
Also, is it possible to have non-military organizations fight in wars?
Yes, although they become considered military while they are doing so.
It's not that weird, really. It could be as simple as they are military when acting as one and not when they aren't, although it isn't necessarily that simple.So, in Star Trek, we have an organization that does the military's job (some of the time) despite the fact that it's stated to not be a military? And I thought the time travel episodes were weird.
\You're right. It is weird the characters claim Starfleet isn't military.
The terms frigate and destroyer have only been used for military ships ever since the terms have begun to be used. I don't imagine that ever changing.Why not, exactly?
Have you tried imagining harder?The terms frigate and destroyer have only been used for military ships ever since the terms have begun to be used. I don't imagine that ever changing.
Paramilitary forces have the structures of militaries and can act as or in conjunction with military forces in times of war under the laws of war as they stand today. This doesn't mean they are to be considered military forces when they aren't. And at what point after Starfleet's establishment and prior to the Dominion War in DS9 do we have evidence of either United Earth or the United Federation of Planets having been in a state of "total war" at all?
That is itself a strawman. I am not saying "I don't think Starfleet is or has ever been a military organization, ever, full stop" to begin with, and never have been. Further, the question I am addressing is more why certain characters within the fiction don't think of it as a military organization, which is not necessarily the same thing as what my own views are, although I think the latter need to be reasonably based upon and account for what is presented within the fiction, and not contradict it without sufficient justification, in order to be valid.The fact remains these are all strawman arguments as you haven't even actually addressed the question of why you don't think of starfleet as a military organisation.
Thank you, I appreciate your saying so, and I do not mean that in a sarcastic, snarky, or dismissive way.You have given an extremely strong case against the necessity of classing starfleet as a military
Sadly, I can only think from this that you have not read my posts in this thread carefully enough, because I have never disputed that. I have been almost exclusively focusing on the historical period that precedes the UFP's existence in my comments, and thought I had repeatedly made that very clear. What you describe is undeniably the position in which Starfleet ends up by the 2370s. But I have been discussing where it started out in the 2130s, the general thrust of my argument being that it was not originally envisioned as being such, and I have endeavored to support this both through examples from within the fiction and from actual history.The fact that countries have historically existed without a formal navy is meaningless, the UFP has one, starfleet. They are the primary, if not sole, warfighting body available to the UFP and even under conditions of prolonged existential war they continue to fulfill that role.
Again, you have deeply misunderstood what I have said. The Dominion War was fairly evidently a total war, meaning one in which most or all of a society's resources and activities are dedicated in one way or another to the war effort, one whose direct effects permeate and pervade far beyond the immediate arena of fighting. I merely pointed out that it's the only one we actually have evidence of the Federation ever being involved in, and moreover that such has been more or less outright stated. They have had other wars and conflicts before—with the Klingons, the Cardassians, and the Tzenkethi, to name a few—but never one of this scale and intensity, insofar as has been described to us.Incidentally whether ground fighting occurs or not is irrelevent to whether a war is considered "total" in any time period. "Total war" requires there to be no restrictions on the manner in which the war is fought, not necessarily that every possible means was actually used. There's a strong case for arguing the Dominoin War crossed that boundary given the dropping or moral and diplomatic constraints throughout the conflict. Stealthed anti personnel weapons and concealed mines - yup. Subspace weapons - pretty sure asking the prophets for help with the Dominion reinforcements counts. Deliberate deception in diplomacy to commit a foreign power and their population - yup. Willingness from at least part of the command structure to commit genocide - yup.
I should have thought it quite obvious from the point at which this thread branched off into this area of discussion—and apologies to @at Quark's if he or she feels it has been hijacked; I did try a couple of times to redirect it back to Cochrane—that the onscreen quotes you mention form the initial basis of the position. Multiple characters say that Starfleet is not military and go unchallenged (even in contexts where one might well expect a challenge to be presented, especially if we were supposed to believe, dramatically speaking, that a character was in factual error). Yet other evidence points to the contrary, at least insofar as the post-UFP era is concerned. Generally, I have sought to resolve this apparent inconsistency through creative interpretation of all the available information, and the more I've thought and written about it, the less inconsistent it actually appears to me.So, why are starfleet not a military? Not "why don't they have to be one" or "does a nation necessarily have to have a military" or "can organisations exist with a military structure without being one" but "why aren't they one?"
Yes we have onscreen quotes saying they are not one, we have plenty saying they are. Individual characters opinions may well vary but it's clear that on balance there is far from a consensus. Not once in your (admittedly well structured and subtly evasive) posts have you actually given a straight answer.
Existence without even a single ship on the open water until 24 May 1798 when U.S.S. Ganges, a converted merchantman, set sail. "Tiny" is a bit of an understatement.
My guess is that someone from the 24th century would say we are thinking in too narrow terms to understand why Starfleet is not a military. Similarly how Earth does not use currency being beyond our understanding.
As did the Military Assault Command at the time of ENT, despite no evident presence beyond Earth except where they were ultimately carried by Starfleet's ships.Sure, but they were starting from scratch on the most high-tech project possible at that time, so it wasn't going to happen overnight. But the navy had an organization, it had funding, it had materiel, it had personnel.
How about to provoke and exercise our imaginations?I suppose so, but if it's beyond our understanding there's really no point in discussing it.
And what of Starfleet before the UFP, and indeed before ENT even?But I will define my terms, and others can disagree with the definition or the conclusion. I'll define "a military" as a permanent national fighting force. "Permanent" in that it is not disbanded and reorganized as circumstances require, and "national" in that it is controlled at the highest possible level of government (Some people may think of the Federation as supranational, but for this I count it as national).
As far as I can tell, Starfleet fits that definition. It exists permanently in peacetime as well as war, it is controlled by and protects and serves the whole UFP, and when there is fighting to be done, it is the organization that does it.
I should have thought it quite obvious from the point at which this thread branched off into this area of discussion—and apologies to @at Quark's if he or she feels it has been hijacked; I did try a couple of times to redirect it back to Cochrane—that the onscreen quotes you mention form the initial basis of the position.
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