My take on this ep's depiction of combat is similar to what
Dingoand a few others have said: basically, this ep is not meant to be representative of how Trek ground combat is
supposed to be, or generally is. It's representative of what happens when both sides (the Starfleet side more, though, in this case) have already been beaten to crap, and THEN they have to slug it out with a comparably sized enemy force. Maybe one or both sides
did have some of the technology and equipment that many in this thread have been mentioning we should have seen, but it's been destroyed by the constant fighting. Or just wasn't appliacable to the situation for whatever reason (such as the suggestion that the terrain was too difficult for most ground vehicles, or that the Defiant prevented the Jen'Hadar from deploying any ground craft at the start of the ep).
And yes, I'm aware that none of those explanations are supported by any on screen-evidence, but in this case, I feel it doesn't matter. Sometimes, when they want to tell a certain story, I don't mind hand-waving this kind of stuff away to help them tell it. Sure, the "real" reasons no doubt have more to do with budgetary or time constraints and a lack of understanding of military tactics on the part of the writers, but who cares?
Well, obviously
some do, but I don't. Not when the ep is this good. But that, too, is subjective.
Yet, what the producers don't seem to realize, is that making characters and organizations perpetually stupid is completely counterproductive to this.
It is far more effective when characters do everything they possibly can and still fail, instead of making a token effort and then complaining about things going wrong.
The whole Dominion War, indeed the whole of Star Trek, would have been far more poignant if the characters had brains, instead of lacking them. Instead, I find myself laughing far too much when characters die and ships blow up.
I have seen this take from many over the years, and I have to say, I don't get it. I enjoy the show. I think it's great. So for me, the explanation "Well, clearly there's some writing flubbing going on here. But in-universe, it's safe to assume there is a
good reason for them doing what they're doing, they just didn't specifiy what that reason is on-screen" makes a hell of a lot more sense than "I am watching a TV show about idiots".
Yes, the first explanation requires more suspension of disbelief... but to me, Trek (and shows like it) is
all about suspension of diebelief, isn't it?
If I find myself unable to look at a given TV show with that perspective, if I find that when people die and ships blow up during massive battles as part of an overarching war story, I'm
laughing, as you put it... then I stop watching that show, because clearly, I am unable to take it seriously, which in turn (for me) means I really don't like said show. If I were to actually start rationalizing in my mind some of the inconsistencies and writing flubs (and I'm not saying they aren't there, cause they ARE) with the explanation "Starfleet is, in fact, an organization of complete retards", then I've lost my ability to enjoy the show.