Close, you skipped a step between major and colonel -- you forgot the lieutenant colonel.JeremyW said:
Rosalind, if we use Kira Nerys as an example, then Major would be at Lt. Cmdr, Colonel is a full commander, and General would more than likely be a Captain.
David Mack said:
It's also possible that some Bajoran Militia officers with the rank of colonel might have entered Starfleet as commanders rather than as captains (as Kira did), and that Starfleet decides such rank assignments on an individual basis, taking into account such factors as length of service, honors and commendations (or, conversely, reprimands and serious infractions), etc.
Colonel Kira Nerys, because of her prestigious assignment and distinguished service, was deemed worthy of the rank of captain when she agreed to join Starfleet.
Just one possible theory. YMMV.
~ Dave
p.101 — Parek Tonn is an invention of the author and former Star Trek Books editor John J. Ordover. It was originally intended as an analog for the Hebrew fortress of Masada, in a Mack/Ordover spec teleplay for Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. Though that script did not sell, it served as a calling card that landed Mack and Ordover their first DS9 script assignment, "Starship Down."
p.13 — Neurocine was established in the DS9 episode "Civil Defense" as a lethal aerosol. Since I didn't realize when I wrote the word in the manuscript that it had actually been used before in Star Trek, one can only hope that Starfleet's drug of the same name has a more beneficial effect than that used in Cardassian counter-insurgency systems. It's also possible that the two cultures use the same name for two different drugs.
p.163 — Taran'atar's belief that the word Jem'Hadar means "soldier" is an invention of the author.
I guess this thread from last month didn't give it away.Christopher said:
Hey, I didn't realize there were annotations.
In an Earth language, sure. Who knows what it really means in Jem'Hadar-ese?...the name "Jem'Hadar" was derived by DS9's writers from the Indian rank jemadar, a junior officer. So it kinda does mean "soldier."
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