The dialogue between Sisko and Dax at the end of the episode suggested that the weapon that Sisko used against the civilian Maquis did require authorization for use by Starfleet command.As for Sisko's actions, since when has WMD use required authorization from anybody higher up than a starship CO? All of the weapons of a starship are WMDs (even though phasers and photon torpedoes can also trivially be rigged to be nonlethal riot control gear, or scientific instruments, or whatever). Starfleet has general orders specifically authorizing the total destruction of a planet's civilization, and Sisko fell far short of that; we don't know if the Starfleet criteria were met, because we don't know the criteria, but since Starfleet didn't do anything visible to Sisko, we might as well argue Sisko did meet the criteria for regulations-approved use of WMDs.
Timo Saloniemi
Since Starfleet didn't do anything, as far as the audience knows, to Sisko, could it be implied that Starfleet command simply looked the other away?but since Starfleet didn't do anything visible to Sisko, we might as well argue Sisko did meet the criteria for regulations-approved use of WMDs.
Timo Saloniemi
Do we know that no civilian Maquis died or was hurt by the wmd that Sisko unleashed on them? I remember that once the torpedoes impacted the Maquis planet, the poison spread very quickly around the planet. I find it hard to believe that there were no civilian casualties.
As for the balancing of the scales, that was not Sisko's intent. Sisko did what he did to capture Eddington. It was Sisko's personal vendetta against Eddington.
Do we know that no civilian Maquis died or was hurt by the wmd that Sisko unleashed on them? I remember that once the torpedoes impacted the Maquis planet, the poison spread very quickly around the planet. I find it hard to believe that there were no civilian casualties.
Besides, does the ends justify the means? Maybe Sisko should have a talk with Picard, or listen to Picard's speech to Data about ends justifying the means in "Redemption". Also, what kind of precedent was Sisko establishing? Should all future border disputes be decided by each side poisoning the other sides' border planets to make them uninhabitable except for your own species, and then offering to trade?
Since Starfleet didn't do anything, as far as the audience knows, to Sisko, could it be implied that Starfleet command simply looked the other away?
You're right. This wouldn't be the first time.And this certainly wouldn't be the first time Starfleet overlooked the means in favor of the ends.
Sisko gave those colonists enough time to evacuate. If there were any casualties, we would have heard about them.
Noted. Agree to disagree.Also, I take issue with @velour's claim that there is such a thing as "civilian Maquis".
You're right. This wouldn't be the first time.
Sisko gave the Maquis hardly any time to evacuate.
The dialogue on board the Defiant indicated that Sisko didn't give a damn about whether the civilian Maquis had even began to evacuate before Sisko ordered the torpedoes to be fired.
WORF: Set torpedo targets to fifty kilometres above ground level.
CREWWOMAN: Aye, sir.
WORF: Lock. Ready, Captain.
SISKO: Time?
KIRA: One minute left. And still no transport ship activity or any other sign that they're beginning to evacuate.
SISKO: Commander Worf, prepare to fire torpedoes on my mark.
WORF: Detach safeties on torpedoes one and two.
KIRA: Incoming message. It's Eddington.
EDDINGTON: (hologram) What are you really up to, Javert? Do you expect me to believe that a decorated Starfleet officer, the pride of the service, is going to poison an entire planet?
SISKO: That's exactly what I'm going to do.
EDDINGTON: You're bluffing.
SISKO: Am I? Commander, launch torpedoes. Commander, I said launch torpedoes!
WORF: Aye, sir.
The wmd that Sisko used required authorization of use by Starfleet command. Sisko had no authorization to use them. Furthermore, he deliberately targeted a planet with civilians. I find it hard to believe that there were no civilian casualties from Sisko's wmd. And what about the massive ecological damage. Is that a crime?
What Sisko did was unsavory in so many ways.
Sisko's motive in unleashing the wmds was twisted. Sisko endangered (more likely, ended) the lives of many civilians in order to satisfy his obsession with capturing Eddington. Sisko treated the civilians on the planet as though they were worthless pawns in his personal quest to get Eddington.
The Maquis were not an existential threat to the Federation. Why was Sisko fighting the Cardassians' war for them? The Maquis targeted the Cardassians. When the Cardassian-Dominion alliance went about to wipe out the Maquis, did Sisko start shooting wmds at Cardassia in order to balance the scales?
It did appear that Sisko committed war crimes or crimes against humanity.At the very least, Sisko violated some Starfleet regulation.
But I suppose violating Starfleet regulations would have been the least of his worries.
In the end, I suppose it didn't matter because no one would hold Sisko to account for his actions.
Noted. Agree to disagree.
Well 15 million dead Bajorans is not a small number. There was also rape and sex slavery.
Plus it did seem like the Central Command's plan was to work the Bajoran population to death to make room for Cardassians to colonialize the planet. It was not a plan to kill as many Bajorans as they could right away, but they still seemed to have a nasty end game.
Interstellar law is pretty useless if it only bans the most extreme crimes, like blowing up planets and is designed to allow governments with no respect for others to save face and get away with pretty nasty stuff.
How was he going to do that? A Martian lands on Earth and tells the United Nations with proof he just killed every living sentient being on Alpha Centuri, who on Earth has the legal right to charge him? No one.
Later:SCOTT [OC]: This is the USS Enterprise.
KIRK: Scotty, General Order Twenty Four. Two hours! In two hours!
ANAN: Enterprise, this is Anan Seven, First Councilman of the High Council of Eminiar.
[Bridge]
ANAN [OC]: We hold your Captain, his party, your Ambassador and his party prisoners.
[Council Room]
ANAN: Unless you immediately start transportation of all personnel aboard your ship to the surface, the hostages will be killed. You have thirty minutes. I mean it, Captain.
KIRK: All that it means is that I won't be around for the destruction. You heard me give General Order Twenty Four. That means in two hours the Enterprise will destroy Eminiar Seven.
and:SCOTT: Open a channel, Lieutenant. This is the commander of the USS Enterprise.
[Council Room]
SCOTT [OC]: All cities and installations on Eminiar Seven have been located, identified, and fed into our fire-control system. In one hour and forty five minutes
[Bridge]
SCOTT: The entire inhabited surface of your planet will be destroyed.
[Council Room]
SCOTT: You have that long to surrender your hostages.
SCOTT [OC]: Scott here, Captain.
KIRK: Cancel implementation of General Order Twenty Four. Alert transporter room. We're ready to beam up.
AYELBORNE: To wage war, Captain? To kill millions of innocent people? To destroy life on a planetary scale? Is that what you're defending?
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