Re: Typhon Pact: Zero Sum Game Review thread
I think S31 would be interested in recruiting anyone they think can serve their agendas.
Certainly Section 31 would plausibly be ready to use and manipulate pretty much anyone in any way they saw fit to achieve their ends, but as far as recruiting someone into their actual organisation, they would need to put a priority on loyalty to their cause.
We can assert this without accepting that their cause is moral. And of course, this process of indoctrination can be understood as a form of corruption. It is distinct, however, from other types of corruption. For example, it's safe it say that Section might hire mercenaries, but wouldn't normally induct them into their organisation, especially if they continued their mercenary activities, because they wouldn't be loyal to the cause: their loyalites could be bought, thus compromising Section 31. Similarly, they probably wouldn't be too interested in recruiting a Starfleet officer whose ethics and loyalties change according to his current choice of girlfriend, because such an individual wouldn't likely be fiercely loyal to Section 31's cause. Just as a practical issue, it would be stupid to recruit a lot of agents whose loyalties vacillate all the time. Since Section 31 has survived for a long time without being compromised, it stands to reason that they must be pretty careful as far as recruitment is concerned.
What flandry84 is getting at, as I understand it, is that Section 31's manipulation of Bashir seems to make him less appealing as an actual agent (whereas Section 31 has been very interested in recruiting him in the past, in part because of his loyalty to the Federation and the strength of his ethical convictions).
I don't have a strong opinion on this personally, since I'm not especially familiar with how Section 31 has been portrayed in the Trek novel-verse, but I can see why flandry84 might point this out on the basis of how Section 31 was portrayed in the original DS9 tv series.
For example, in
Inquisition, Sloan puts Bashir through a sort of intense stress test to see if he is willing to consider betraying the Federation. It's only after Bashir passes this test that Sloan extends the offer to join Section 31. Similarly, I could imagine another Section 31 virtual reality test involving a femme fatale attempting to seduce the potential candidate into compromising his loyalties.