In the briefing, the C in C tells Kirk he’s being sent because “They’ll think twice about attacking the Enterprise under you command.” In TFF, the Enterprise under Kirk’s command was a very attractive target for glory-seeking Klingons. Has something changed since then?
Supposedly, the last encounter ended in a détente. Surely Klingons wouldn't risk that happening again!
Kirk didn’t want to go but did because Spock “personally vouched” for him. What does that mean?
I'd argue Spock alleviated Starfleet concerns about Kirk being an ultraconservative old racist by personally vouching that he'd behave (that is, that Spock would make sure his friend behaved). Thus, if Kirk refused to go after all this, Spock would have embarrassingly wasted political capital. A good argument for making Kirk agree to going, between friends...
What’s with the mini-ridges on the Klingons? Are they recovering Augments? Is this what Kor looks like?
It's not what Kang looked like in "Flashback"...
I'd argue, based on the changing ridge styles in all the TOS movies, that Klingons crewing a particular ship tend to come from the same clan and to have the same ridge patterns. Gorkon just happened to sail on a ship from a House that wasn't all that well endowed.
You’d think they’d know better than to get wasted at this dinner. Did Valeris perhaps spike the ale so they got drunk faster?
Kirk doesn't exactly spit in the glass when meeting Khan, either. I wouldn't expect him to be extra careful here - he doesn't really have all that much to lose, after all. He's being forced to mingle with his enemy, and alcohol might make that a bit more tolerable; OTOH, he knows he has the drop on these bastards now, what with the idiots having blown up their own moon and now crawling to beg for mercy.
Why did Chang accept the Enterprise’s surrender? Chekov said that if Kronos One fired on the Enterprise with the shields down, the Enterprise wouldn’t be able to respond.
Chang would have needed witnesses. If he destroyed the Starfleet ship, the UFP government would have to rely on his word on what happened. If he let Kirk live, he could milk on forced confessions in the best case, or enjoy the ignorant embarrassment of the
Enterprise crew trying to explain themselves in the worst.
I’m not following Spock’s logic on this one:
Chekov says he thinks it would have made more sense for the assassins to have beamed aboard from the cloaked BOP. Spock responds that somebody had to be on the Enterprise to hack the data banks. What does that have to do with which ship the assassins beamed over from?
I'd tend to agree with Spock: the enemy has made a great effort in making it look like the
Enterprise was the guilty party. Why would they stop halfway, and have the assassins come from the wrong ship?
I’m having trouble understanding the conspirators’ plan to kill Kirk and McCoy.
“Martia, first verify that Kirk and McCoy have a way to beam off the surface. Then, using that as your excuse for helping them, lead them out of the mines and out of the beaming shield and light a flare. We’ll come along a few minutes later, kill Kirk and McCoy, and send you on your way with a full pardon. What could possibly go wrong?”
As McCoy might say, what the hell kind of a plan is that?
It really is the classic "shot while escaping" plan. In general, it does look better in public than the "shot while sleeping" one... And given that this was Rura Penthe, the escape itself had to be relatively elaborate - no half-assed "they somehow got keys to their leg irons and made a run for it" would convince the public here.
I don't really see what
could have gone wrong, save for the idea of an enemy warship settling in orbit with impunity. And I don't think the prison manager should have been counting on that happening...
They don’t generally summon individual personnel over public address.
How would we know that? We haven't spent all that much time aboard these ships.
Valeris was taken in by this?
Probably not. But she had no real choice. If her cover was blown, she had nothing to lose; if it wasn't, she still had something to win. She was in the cabal, yes, but she wasn't suicidal; she wouldn't have tried a final sally where she would have gone down taking Kirk and Spock with him (even though Chang would probably have expected that of her). But she would have done everything in her power to save her own skin, and her options for that would have been very limited when locked into a starship in deep space.
Is there something particular to the invisiBOP that makes it vulnerable to this tactic? Or is this a tactic that would have worked against any cloaked vessel and nobody thought of it until this moment?
Difficult to tell - but we could argue, keeping with the International Year of Geophysics analogue, that the "equipment to study gaseous anomalies" was brand new and top-notch (and had military applications built in), and that the whole concept of a tracking torpedo would have been theoretical in any prior engagement.
Timo Saloniemi