Well, going on what I saw in INSURRECTION,they were doing nothing note worthy but goofing around 'out there' while Earth was getting attacked, or Betazed was attacked...noooooo...Picard was hosting a party with midgets and wearing a wig.
Sorry..I call that doing nothing....
Rob
Being ORDERED to do a diplomatic meeting with some aliens (And INS was supposed to be after the Dominion War, I think) isn't much worse then Sisko and co taking a break fro war to go play baseball...
You would be surprised at what happens in the name of fun on the 'front lines' of a war. My grandfather, a WW2 vet, told me they would be playing baseball on make shift fields while making their way through Europe on their way to Germany...at least Sisko and his crew did something in the war..
Earth was attacked, the Golden Gate bridge smashed, and where was the captain of the Federation's flagship exactly? Then again, Starfleet was probably worried he'd 'defect' again, and kill thousands of federation men/women as he did during that whole Borg ordeal.
Rob
The captain of the Flagship was off fighting on the front lines, most likely, and not held back to a very secure planet no one assumed would be attacked anyways.
The real reason we never ever SAW them was because Paramount ordered that the Sovereign class vessel be used only in the movies.
And importantly, the show was pretty explicit about Bajor being a strategically unimportant backwater whose only claim to glory was the wormhole. Since the wormhole ceased to exist as a means of passage in "Sacrifice of the Angels", Bajor's strategic importance disappeared overnight. So it's extremely unlikely that we saw any major percentage of the important Dominion War battles when we watched the show called ST: Deep Space Nine, because that show didn't take place in the war zone.DS9 didn't feature EVERY major engagement, just the ones important to Sisko and co (and a LOT of them happened off-screen) like Operation Return or the final battle.
Which gets us back to the issue of when ST:INS took place. If it was during the war, there probably wouldn't be much emphasis on brush fires... Or on archaeology, duck-blind study of supposed primitive cultures, or diplomacy with cultures that have only recently discovered warp drive.I'm also pretty sure there was some passing line about "putting out brush fires" in Insurrection, right?
it's extremely unlikely that we saw any major percentage of the important Dominion War battles when we watched the show called ST: Deep Space Nine, because that show didn't take place in the war zone.
So, even if you disregard Bajor, DS9 was not only guarding the Wormhole it was the headquarters of the 9th fleet after Operation Return. The decisions that fleet made ultimately decided the war and we saw all of those battles. DS9 itself wasn't necessarily on the front but it was a tempting target with strategic importance added to the fact that any time anything important on the actual front happened, Sisko and company were present (i.e. all the battles we saw beyond that point including the final defeat of the Dominion at Cardassia Prime.)Captain's personal log, stardate 51247.5. It's been a week since our return to Deep Space Nine, but the mood of celebration continues. We're still at war, and the station's been designated Headquarters for the Ninth Fleet. That, plus our strategic position guarding the wormhole, makes DS Nine one of the most tempting targets in the entire quadrant. But for now at least, the war seems very far away.
I don't really agree. We saw plenty of Galaxy class ships and we saw plenty of Akira class ships too. We also saw a lot of Excelsior class ships (which could have been built at really any point and while the design was a century old it had been re-fit enough times to still be in service/production upto the point Voyager was launched at least.) That's not to mention the Defiant class ships and the attack fighters which were present at more battles than one.Also interestingly, whenever there was combat action relating to DS9, we saw fleets consisting largely of century-old ship types. Where were all the modern ships, say, the likes of the ones we saw in "Best of Both Worlds", with definite Galaxy design lineage? Where else but on the main fronts of the war...
Well, we can pretty much rule out the possibility of it happening before the war started, right? The idea of it happening after it ended also seems wrong (due to the whole Worf issue along with a whole bunch of others...) I don't know how to justify what is seen/heard on screen with any other conclusion than the war was happening during Insurrection.Which gets us back to the issue of when ST:INS took place. If it was during the war, there probably wouldn't be much emphasis on brush fires... Or on archaeology, duck-blind study of supposed primitive cultures, or diplomacy with cultures that have only recently discovered warp drive.
Seeing how the DS9 production team were PO'ed enough over the Defiant being used in First Contact, I doubt they'd have allowed the TNG movie crew to do a Dominion story.
Seeing how the DS9 production team were PO'ed enough over the Defiant being used in First Contact, I doubt they'd have allowed the TNG movie crew to do a Dominion story.
They were PO'd because the instant the ship is shown it's getting its ass handed to it and is burning in space. The objection was warranted I think- Defiant should have done a better job against the Cube since that's what it was designed to do.
The Defiant was never tested in actual battle with a Cube, so whether or not it was designed to fight the Borg didn't really matter. It would've seemed rather odd that the Defiant would be able to last against a Cube undamaged for hours in a running battle while other bigger stronger ships were being blasted apart.
But anywho, if TNG did a Dominion movie the DS9 crew would have to mention it in DS9 since it would be part of the war and I doubt they'd want to do that.
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