With regards to the Federation/Cardassian war, I was always under the impression that it was a relatively small, localized war, mostly the Federation playing on defence against a pissed off Cardassia over territorial and economic issues. The Federation has no interest in conquering and occupying a nation like Cardassia. This is like saying a retarded kid can beat you up just because you didn't flip out on him and pound him into the ground when he pushed you. The stakes weren't high enough for the Feds to wage a total war on Cardassia, it would be different against an enemy that was literally knocking on Earth's door, as it was during the Dominion War.
Also, I'm not certain how relevant it is to bring up the alternate history of "Yesterday's Enterprise". That was a different universe that diverged 25 years prior. For all we know (fanfic hat on), after the events of Narendra III, the Klingons had a massive military build up for their war against the Romulans, then turned it against the Feds in sneak attacks that crippled the Federation's ship-building capacity, maybe a few of the major worlds like Vulcan or Andoria or even Earth, and put the Federation at a disadvantage they wouldn't ever recover from. The point is, it's alternate history, we've got no idea what the differences are. Using it as an argument to debate the Feds versus the Klingons during the TNG era, or post-Dominion war, or whatever, doesn't dictate outcomes.
As an aside, just reading through the episode notes, YE garnered 12 million viewers that week, 20% higher than the season average of about 10 million viewers.
Ten million viewers. For Star Trek. Those were the days! (of fewer entertainment choices
)
Also, I'm not certain how relevant it is to bring up the alternate history of "Yesterday's Enterprise". That was a different universe that diverged 25 years prior. For all we know (fanfic hat on), after the events of Narendra III, the Klingons had a massive military build up for their war against the Romulans, then turned it against the Feds in sneak attacks that crippled the Federation's ship-building capacity, maybe a few of the major worlds like Vulcan or Andoria or even Earth, and put the Federation at a disadvantage they wouldn't ever recover from. The point is, it's alternate history, we've got no idea what the differences are. Using it as an argument to debate the Feds versus the Klingons during the TNG era, or post-Dominion war, or whatever, doesn't dictate outcomes.
As an aside, just reading through the episode notes, YE garnered 12 million viewers that week, 20% higher than the season average of about 10 million viewers.
Ten million viewers. For Star Trek. Those were the days! (of fewer entertainment choices

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