Timo said:
In today's parlance, different "commands" wouldn't separate the executive organs of a government into military and nonmilitary ones. Rather, there would be commands dedicated to the different aspects of the killing thing, and then those dedicated to logistics, accounting, and perhaps exploration when in support of the killing thing. Sub-organizations doing logistics, accounting and exploration not related to the killing thing would not be mere commands under an overall military umbrella.
Not sure where you're getting this from, exactly. The FAA isn't a "command" that handles different aspects of the killing thing, neither is NASA. That's the Air Force's job. That's because the air force is a military organization and answers to the Department of Defense. The FAA answers to the Department of transportation, and NASA answers directly to Congress.
So in today's parlance, different departments DO separate military from nonmilitary aviation and space flight.
Timo said:
In that sense, I feel it is much more natural to assume that Starfleet Command and Military Assault Command are both organizations specializing in killing, among other things of course.
I would too, if only I was willing to ignore the fact that Starfleet clearly does NOT specialize in killing and instead specializes in scientific research and space exploration. It's more than the fact that they're not particularly good at it, it's a matter of priorities involved in the building and deployment of their ships, the quality of their tactics and procedures, the allocation of resources (like the warp-five engine) on things that have virtually no military value.
Timo said:
what we have in ENT is the UESF as a given, an organization with certain demonstrable qualities. So our interpretation of the pseudohistory will have to have deliberation towards the desired endpoint.
Certainly it should be remembered that military traditions readily fly out of the window when they lose wars. WWI saw the end of many such traditions when they came close to humiliating the British Empire. We have to figure out what the nascent space combat force of a recently devastated planet suffering from a justified inferiority complex would look like, and which traditions it would uphold, which abandon. Certainly we would expect to catch it in a state of unreadiness, with many of its organizations untested and ill equipped for the threat environment that so far has not been engaged.
Actually, if you're using WWI as an example, you would see the exact opposite. The British Empire began to develop completely new tactics after the debacle of the Battle of Jutland, and other nations--the Japanese Empire and the Germans, for example--came to develop completely new ones in record time that ultimately changed the shape of naval warfare as we know it. It hardly produced a state of unreadiness in ANY of the states that survived either war; if anything, the lessons of those wars taught what to do and what not to do.
Two things are telling for ENT's universe. First is the fact that they choose to name their warp five ships after old NASA orbiters. Their symbol resembles NASA's symbol, their uniforms have a different mission patch for each ship, and Enterprise spends a good amount of time doing things like laying out subspace transceivers, looking for inhabited worlds, planting flags and footprints, etc. Starfleet certainly believes it's descended from NASA or something similar, which makes plenty of sense. The other thing we know, however, is that the Third World War did involve a fair amount of space-based weapons, and quite possibly a number of space-based combat actions. At least to the point that Lilly immediately mistook the Borg attack on their launch facility to be an ECON space craft firing at them from orbit (and no, she did NOT mistake it for some sort of turbojet gunship; Liully's smart enough to know better). It seems even after the devastation after World War-III, Earth had some experience with space combat and would have had plenty of time to theorize and test the possible tactics of combat on a larger scale, especially in the years after the Phoenix broke the light barrier.
Timo said:
And Starfleet already HAS a specialist branch whose focus is (generally) combat and defense. It's called "Starfleet Security," and would seem to include Malcolm Reed and the Warp-Five redshirts.
Actually, just the opposite would seem to be true. In the ENT timeframe, Starfleet Security is the organization dispatching Commander Collins to investigate the mugging of Phlox in "Affliction". This organization is never mentioned as operating aboard starships, and when Collins introduces herself as representing it, Reed is present and specifically is
not said to come from the same organization. The situation would more or less demand mentioning that Reed is from SF Security if that were the case.
Seemed quite clear to me they were part of the same division of Starfleet, just different departments. Collins was an investigator, Reed as an armory officer. Either way, Reed's "security teams" are the closest thing Enterprise has to Naval Infantry, a trend which persists for hundreds of years after Starfleet assimilates the MACOs.
Timo said:
Certainly it is far from established that Reed's force, never mind Starfleet Security, would be the only element of Starfleet interested in combat. Suggesting that Reed is the counterpart of a TOS internal security redshirt like Giotto or Garrovick, as opposed to a TOS main gun operator goldshirt like Sulu or Tomlinson, is just plain silly.
But that's exactly what Reed IS, Timo, considering that, considering Garrovick is referred to as "the security duty officer," which is already half of Malcolm's job. I again remind you of the fact that Archer considers a MACO to be a better choice for the tactical position than a Starfleet armory officer; quite probably, the OTHER half of Malcolm's job description is something Starfleet does not yet emphasize at the academy, and won't until Starfleet is taken over by the Federation Council and combined with the MACOs. In that case, the roll of "armory officer" is refined to include just the ship's crew-served weapons systems, and ship-to-ship ordinance enters the command division.
Then again, it may have happened even sooner than that, since Captain Hernandez has a "tactical officer" where Archer's crew has the armory officer doing double duty.
Timo said:
Are you trying to claim that you disagree with the fact that "military" and "navy" were opposing terms basically until the end of the Victorian times?
No, I'm claiming that pre-Victorian times are gone, and will never be back. THANK GOD!
Timo said:
in this case, Earth Starfleet has less than a century between its organization and what we would consider "modern" organizations today. Some of those organizations seem to still be in existence; the Royal Navy, for example, which Malcolm explicitly refers to as a military organization.
But the Royal Navy stays afloat.
Right. All the more reason for Earth Starfleet to borrow traditions WE still use than traditions that even the Royal Navy would call weird and archaic.
Timo said:And interservices rivalry would be assured to continue in some form or another.
And there's nothing to indicate rivalry between Starfleet and the MACOs. Oh, there's plenty of rivalry between Malcolm and Hayes, and to a much lesser extent between Security and Hayes' squad. THAT is the sort of rivalry common to different branches of military organizations, and in that case it's fitting. Macolm's security forces are literally Starfleet's combat force; starfleet AS A WHOLE is not a combat force, since two thirds of its organizational structure, at that time, is not combat-oriented. It's only Kirk's day, when half the command division is in charge of tactical systems, that we can say for sure this has changed.
Timo said:
So it's clear that Earth Starfleet isn't borrowing word useage from the late 17th century
But it explicitly is, using commands such as "helm to starboard".
Since most navies use those terms right up to the present day, the usage is still contemporary. The disctinction between "military" and "navy," however, is currently alien to every nation that HAS a navy, and most of those that don't.
Timo said:
The about four references to "Starfleet might not be the principal organization for industrialized killing in space" are outvoted by the hundreds of phase gun blasts delivered by NX-01 against dozens of Earth enemies.
Let's be clear on this: Enterprise delivered phaser blasts to ENTERPRISE's enemies. This distinction is important, because the ship only occasionally engaged in combat explicitly on Earth's behalf and most often in its own self defense. This holds true for all three shooting engagements with the Klingons, all engagements with the Suliban, the Tholians, the Tellarites, and so forth. It is only against the Xindi that Enterprise explicitly acts on Earth's behalf, and this in time of emergency when it's the only ship fast enough to make the trip, on a mission that everyone else thinks is a fool's errand.
I've said it before: bolted on weapons and a grumpy captain do not a warship make. Neither, for that matter, does the willingness to USE those weapons.
Timo said:If the characters claim they are not Earth's valiant soldier defenders, they are lying.
If I shoot a man who is trying to blow up a commuter train, and then claim that I am not a soldier, you can rest assured I am telling the truth. I'm not wearing a soldier's uniform, I don't have a soldier's commission or legal powers. The uniform I'm wearing is that of the guy they hired to keep idiots with bombs off the trains; as I am, so I claim to be.
Starfleet claims to be an organization focussed on peaceful exploration and scientific research. They have a division of officers whose job it is to protect their ships and stations from aggressive action. I believe they are exactly what they say they are, because they're in a better position to know than I am.
Timo said:
Which is an EXCELLENT example, since HMS Jervis Bay was an "Armed Merchant Cruiser" (I have only rarely heard it called a "warship") and was essentially blown out of the water by a German heavy cruiser that WAS, in fact, a warship.
Indeed. Some warships win, others lose. It doesn't require victory to be a warship. All it requires is war.
Well, it requires specialization. Jervis Bay was a merchant vessel pulling double duty as a warship. You'll find very few history books that refer to the Jervis Bay as something more than it was: an armed merchant vessel.
Enterprise goes down in history the same way: an armed exploration cruiser. In the same way that Jervis Bay is never described as a "tactical assault ship" or "combat cruiser" or "pocket battleship" or "combat escort ship" or such catchy phrasework, you'll find even fewer Starfleet ships referred to as "combat vessels." That's not what they were built for, and it's not what their crews are trained for.
Timo said:
That's all there in plain sight. Semantics and propaganda won't change the fact that NX-01 transcended her original design goals.
Never said it did. But Enterprise didn't ABANDON those goals either, and therefore retained its original primary function: scientific research and exploration.
Timo said:It's utterly ridiculous to claim that she wouldn't be a warship more potent relatively than Admiral Scheer ever was.
Hardly. Admiral Scheer was built from the keel-up to destroy other ships. Its systems, accommodations, training and capabilities were all built with that primary function in mind. Admiral Scheer was NOT built as a long range exploration ship with two holes in the deck where a single-barrel 5-inch gun could be installed by the crew using elbow grease and sweat.
To that end, the 22nd century equivalent of the Admiral Scheer would look nothing at all like NX-01. You're looking for a vessel with a dozen 900 gigajoule phaser cannons, integrated targeting sensors and a dedicated fire control center to coordinate them all. You're looking for a ship whose sensors are just precise enough to track multiple targets over long ranges, give their course and speed with enough resolution to intercept them with weapons. You're looking for a ship that doesn't have science labs, doesn't have equipment sufficient to measure astrophysical or geological phenomena in any detail, and is fairly poorly equipped to explore new worlds or seek out new life forms. You're looking for a ship that was built, from the keel up, with combat in mind.
You're NOT looking for NX-01, a ship that (as Malcolm explained in Silent Enemy) was designed to carry three phase cannons and a battery of torpedoes just powerful enough to scratch a Klingon scout ship's paint.
Timo said:
It's a fundamentally silly idea that jacks of all trades cannot trump aces anyway. The E-D can outhaul any Boomer freighter, outpace any racing boat from the 22nd century, and outgun the heaviest Starfleet or Klingon battleship of the era...
This is demonstrably false. Enterprise-D hardly out gunned Klingon heavyhitters like the Negh'Var, and was at best an even match for the Romulan D'Deridex and Klingon Vorcha class vessels. It has never demonstrated the ability to "out haul" its freighter counterparts, or "out pace any racing boat" either.
Here's the thing about specialization. Enterprise-D is the Starfleet equivalent of an aircraft carrier: lots of power, lots of space, lots of equipment, lots of room, lots of luxuries, lots of weapons. A ship of equal size that sacrificed luxuries and equipment in favor of weapons would be better armed. Sacrificing weapons could make it more luxurious. Sacrificing speed would give it more room for equipment or cargo or even more luxuries. In short, you end up with a ship that gets a solid C+ in every aspect of its design; it's just that a C for a galaxy is the equivalent of an A for a pair of Klingon torpedo boats.
Timo said:
The point is that the past 150 years represent evolution in a specific environment.
Right. The environment of industrialism, where the ascendancy of high technology has largely trumped other considerations such as pure strength of numbers. It's not just naval vessels, Timo, EVERY aspect of society since the industrial revolution has become more and more specialized to particular tasks. This is because, as tasks become more complicated, standards continue to rise, and the amount of resources required to be GOOD at any one task are increasing all the time. The only real way to compete in ever more complicated tasks is to break the task down into smaller problems and assigning specialists to deal with them.
As it is in maritime affairs, so it is in aviation, ground combat, manufacturing, chemistry, physics, politics, management, education, etc. We've evolved long past the days when one person can be fifteen different things to fifteen different people and still do all of those things competently. You can only be the jack of all trades in a world where there are no masters; where education and technology are readily available, the masters have the jacks for breakfast.
Timo said:
a battleship from WWII would still outfight modern opposition in her kind of fight.
Compare the ranges of the Iowa class' main gun to the range of any modern sea-skimming missile and I think you'll begin to sea the absurdity of that statement. Of course, if you upgraded the Iowa with those same weapons, the big guy has a fighting change.
Timo said:
NX-01 became the one-eyed king among the blind, much like the utterly ridiculous first ironclads thrown together from spare parts ruled over the refined combat specialist vessels of their day.
The difference is that the old ironclads WERE combat specialists. NX-01 was not.
Timo said:
Factually, they did. Their military operations directly benefited/harmed Earth, much like Drake's piracy benefited/harmed England. Their exploration of trade contacts and close encounters with three-somethinged female lifeforms expanded Earth's sphere of knowledge, more so than any other known agency or force, just like merchant sailors of yore did.
Of course they benefited Earth. But they did not conduct operations on Earth's behalf, but that of their OWN volition. The Boomers were privately owned and privately operated, not a force of exploration OR combat. What they did and what was in their job description differed only as far as the circumstances. But in the same way that a cop who helps deliver a baby is NOT a doctor, a Boomer who fights off pirates is not a soldier, nor is a boomer who discovers a planet populated by triboobs an explorer.
Timo said:There were de facto forces working on behalf of Earth...
And we're not talking about de facto forces here, or else the Klingon Military is a de facto tourist industry and Dr. Sung is a de facto political leader. We're not debating functions, political implications or precedents. We're talking about the AIMS AND RESPONSIBILITIES of starfleet. Particularly, Starfleet in the 22nd century. Whatever capacity the organization stumbled into, its AIMS AND RESPONSIBILITIES clearly did not revolve around combat. That claim to fame belongs to the MACOs, for whom combat is the primary focus of their entire existence. Since they do not specify what TYPE of combat, it's logical to assume (and even supported in "Home") that this includes space combat. This more than explains why Starfleet has better things to worry about, like exploring new worlds and boldly going.
Timo said:
...As only regards NX-01's originally intended exceptional mission and the provisions thereto. What would you make of the preparations for the launch of Vanguard 1, a US Navy operation?
Quite a bit, actually, since the launch vehicle, satellite, control and servicing facilities were all under armed guard with well-established procedures in the event of hostile action. The Mercury program had far less elaborate security arrangements, mostly because NASA was a civilian organization and the space flight program beyond that point had no explicit military applications.
Timo said:
The Navy got things like Polaris out of Vanguard. The Navy didn't need to install defensive .50-cals on Vanguard to get that.
They didn't need to. Vanguard originally WAS a weapon. The launch facility in this case--the analog to a starship launching a probe--was quite well defended against attack, by people who know how to repel attacks, and are trained in the art of repelling attack so they know exactly what to do and when to do it in the event they ARE attacked.
Of course, it's also worthy of note that all four of the Soviet "Almaz" space stations were armed with a 23mm cannon, except the last one which was equipped with a small missile launcher. And even that seems excessive given the scarcity of hostile encounters between space craft in Earth Orbit (that is to say, never).
Timo said:
By the time Earth Starfleet combines with the MACOs to become a peacekeeping force with a more combative orientation, no doubt Starfleet security will inherit their proficiency and training.
Heh. Since by TOS, Starfleet shipboard armed troops are back to UESF shipboard armed troops standards or way below, I don't see any particular benefit from this line of thought.
Nah. Matt Decker vs. Redshirt Number 5 still ranks up there among the best fist fights in Trek history
More than that, though, its an organizational thing. James Kirk sees nothing particularly odd about calling for battle drills and even encourages his security men to practice hand to hand combat. Doubtless not up to MACO standards, but they still make Malcolm's redshirts look like chicken farmers.
Timo said:
You see, the trend of specialization is a one-way street: once someone creates a specialist combat-only force in a standing army, then his competitors have to do the same to keep from getting rolled.
But that is explicitly false. Standing armies lost to conscript ones in WWII.
And the conscripts were trained to function as specialists in combat before they were sent to the front. That's the difference between a standing army and a general-purpose force: in the latter case, the farmers and peasants pick up shotguns and pitch forks to repel attacks, beat their plow sheers into swords to repel an attack. Even in the 17th century, this was already becoming scarce, as fighting prowess among commoners was more and more difficult to maintain without pressing them into more regular service.
Timo said:
The jump from Earth to space is likely to be even greater than the jump from preindustrial to industrial killing
No doubt. The amount of specialization required in manned space flight is already so great that very few nations are even capable of doing it, and even fewer private companies manage to pull it off.
Timo said:
If Earth Starfleet has other aims and responsibilities other than exploration, they're not their PRIMARY responsibilities in any way shape or form; that honor goes to the MACOs, whose primary aims are (obviously) combat.
Okay, I could accept that much. It still doesn't affect one iota the observed situation where UESF, with its halfhearted commitment to space combat, is the principal (and damn nearly sole) space combat force of Earth, while the MACO force, with its 100% commitment to being badass, plays no known role in space combat.
For one, I've already shown that Earth Starfleet seldom functions in that capacity anyway; Enterprise is only seen engaging in combat because she's in the right place at the right (or wrong) time. Second, it's again uncertain that the two ships accompanying intrepid were Starfleet and not MACO vessels, and ABSOLUTELY certain that some MACOs do have space combat experience, at least enough that Archer would recommend one for Hernandez's tactical officer.