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Why the Resistance to Starfleet as a Military?

Where can you find pleasure, search the universe for treasure
Learn science and technology?
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On a ship with NCC?
Where can you learn to fly, orbital skydive,
Study wormholeography?
Sign up for the big band or sit in the grand stand
When DS9 plays the Vulcan team.

In the Starfleet, you can see the UFP
In the Starfleet, you can put your mind at ease
In the Starfleet, come on people make a stand
In the Starfleet, protect your homeworld's land
In the Starfleet, come on and join your fellow man

They want you! They want you! They want you as a new recruit!

If you like adventure, don't you wait to enter
Starfleet's recruiting office fast
Don't you hesitate, there's no need to wait
They need starship crew fast
Don't you be afraid to join Starfleet today
Fight Borg, Dominion anywhere
They're there around the clock, from Robau to Shouting Spock,
Also the deadly lens flares

In the Starfleet, you can see the UFP
In the Starfleet, you can put your mind at ease
In the Starfleet, come on people make a stand
In the Starfleet, protect your homeworld's land
In the Starfleet, come on and join your fellow man
 
At the risk of being *extremely* nitpicky, perhaps Starfleet could be construed as not being a military simply because it's a navy? AFAIK, the word 'military', in the absolute strictest technical sense, applies to ground based organizations with the appropriate ranks (such as the Army and Marines). That's why you see phrases like "Military and Naval Science".

So in this sense, Starfleet isn't military, it's naval. Although it probably does not explain comments made by characters who are clearly biased anyway, such as Picard.

Well... we know from Tomorrow is Yesterday that Starfleet is a combined force...
It was actually referred to in that episode as "a combined service," which if taken as a multipurpose organization, could really solve a lot of bickering if people were inclined to...
:vulcan:
 
seriously though, we know Starfleet has ground troops, they talked about them in DS9 (and showed them in "Nor the Battle to the Strong"). What those troops are actually called, is anyone's guess. They could be in the regular Starfleet, they could be a separate organization entirely (the 'FALCOs' :lol: ), or as I prefer to call them - and yes, I'm well aware there is no overt evidence for an organization of this name, and I don't care, cuz I like the sound of it anyway - the Starfleet Marine Corps.
The ep makes it pretty clear, if you ask me. The guy that shot himself in the foot identified himself as a Starfleet officer (well, soon to be ex-officer, anyway) and mentioned attending the Academy. He wore the same non-standard uniform that others in that ep (as well as "The Siege of AR-558") wore. Also, in the latter ep, Vargas quotes "Starfleet regulations" about how long they are supposed to remain on the front lines before being rotated out.
And Saito S please refrain from commenting in thread on something you find inappropriate. It does not help the situation. I would suggest hitting the "Notify Moderator" button or staying quiet.
Apologies if that's how it came across; it wasn't how I intended it. I didn't feel it was worth notifying a mod over it, as I didn't find it "inappropriate" per se, I honestly WAS wondering what the heck it was about, since it seemed like such a crazy non-sequitor (and I just chose rather extreme wording to express that). I assumed I had missed something, but maybe not? :lol:
It was actually referred to in that episode as "a combined service," which if taken as a multipurpose organization, could really solve a lot of bickering if people were inclined to...
:vulcan:
Could it be that simple?! :rommie:

But yeah, the "combined service" idea I always took to refer to the fact that Starfleet, as the UFP's military arm, doesn't divide itself into army, navy, etc. And, of course, the fact that many different roles, ranging from diplomacy, to exploration, to disaster relief, to combat against hostile powers, all fall under the same over-arching umbrella.
 
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No, I have said it is their secondary role and is not the mission for which Starfleet was originally created. How you go from that to "maligning" their defense role is beyond me.
Because of your insistence that defense is a "secondary" role, then at other times ignore this role entirely to claim that Starfleet is not a military.

Right, dialog only matters when it SUPPORTS your theory.
It's ironic that you would say something like this when you yourself have ignored all the other character dialog which identifies Starfleet as a military.

When it doesn't, it's hypocritical and stupid.:vulcan:
Everything Captain Archer said did tend to be hypocritical or stupid.

Indeed. The issue is whether or not that legal authority fits the definition of "military." According to Picard, it doesn't.
One character's insistence that Starfleet isn't a military doesn't establish anything like that. If Starfleet is not a military then it has no business acting like one when it comes to defense of the state and its interests.

And two pages ago I summarized clearly that this entire debate boils down to actions vs. words. I once again repeat that ACTIONS do not define the military, WORDS do.
Actions do. And essentially your entire argument can be summed up as, "I don't want Starfleet to be a military."

You yourself just said that the issue of primary vs. secondary role is a non-issue... do you want to amend your position to "Actions speak louder than words... unless they say something I disagree with"?
No, because nothing about my position has to be amended. Starfleet plays a major role in defense of the Federation and its interests, ergo it is a military.

That's the problem: Starfleet is NOT a real organization. There are no objective facts available other than those presented to us in canon. One of those facts was presented by Jean Luc Picard: Starfleet is not a military organization.
And many other characters contradict him, and additionally we can see what Starfleet does and how it acts, and everything points to it being a military. Many people including myself have pointed this out, but you continue to ignore it.

You prefer to ignore it, obviously, but that doesn't mean it'll just go away.
Again, ironic that you should say something like this.

I should believe you're smarter than them because....?
Why should I care if you believe that I obviously know more about the military than the writers of these shows and apparently more than you do.

While I'm totally sure that's true, how much experience do you have with Starfleet?:vulcan:
My experience with the military allows me to identify Starfleet as a military based on what I have seen of it, which is to say as much as is possible as I have seen every episode and every movie, save the animated series.

Let's be clear on this: it was developed by NASA originally to give the Air Force a reusable spaceplane design that could do what the shuttle was NO LONGER ALLOWED to do after the Challenger accident. The program languished for years under NASA development, making slow but steady progress, until the Air Force decided they wanted to develop it into a flight article. NASA handed over the designs, the test craft, the wind tunnel data and all the test materials, and the X-37B was the result.

Absent the Challenger disaster--or at least, the evaporation of political will that came with it--the X-37B would have been unnecessary; the Air Force flew more than a dozen military payloads on the shuttle and would have continued to fly them to the present day if not for the hamstring safety regulations imposed on the program.

Don't forget that NASA let the Air Force monkey around with the shuttles design in the first place to make it compatible with a set of exotic military missions it wound up never performing. Essentially, the shuttle WAS their first option; it simply ceased to be adequate when safety regulations and high operating costs suddenly went through the roof after Challenger and the Air Force resorted to the EELV family--the Atlas and Delta rockets maintained by ULA--to accomplish its defense missions. The X-37B is just the latest development in that saga, and it's legacy NASA hardware.
So you could say that the military has always played a role in space exploration then, couldn't you? ;)

Except for the rather annoying fact that space agencies have always been able to conduct military missions without actually BEING part of the military.
Except that these missions have always been under military purview. NASA can't simply go off and conduct military operations on its own - no civilian organization can.

Because NASA didn't develop ICBMs, and wouldn't be tasked with deploying them if Earth were suddenly invaded by Zentraedi hordes. That would be a mission of pure nation defense, for which purpose we have created The Military.
And yet your organization only illustrates the need for a spaceborne military force in such an event, and how even civilian equipment can be pressed into military service if the need arises.

Frankly, yes. Though admittedly I may simply be playing way too much Halo-3, I'm of the opinion lately that "interplanetary war" is a rather incoherent and illogical concept, because there is there's nothing BETWEEN planets worth fighting over. Wars are fought over territory, over resources, over strategic locations near enemy installations that may compromise future works over territory and resources. In other words, wars are fought for the control of planets.
Or any resources. In any case, the enemy is engaged where they are. Wars have not been fought completely on land for a very long time, and while space is not an ocean, that is how most sci-fis treat it, including Star Trek.

So I cannot help but believe there is and MUST BE a parallel organization specifically oriented for ground (or at the very least "low altitude") combat. Because despite the fact that Starfleet CAN perform in a ground combat role--we've seen them do it often enough--they are not particularly good at it, and the Federation wouldn't exist today if it were purely up to them.
It's unfortunate that nothing was ever seen or even described on screen.

In the 22nd century, the ground combat role is CLEARLY filled by the MACOs.
Actually the MACOs seemed to fill a special operations role.

Whether that organization still exists in the 24th century is anyone's guess, but if we're to take Enterprise as precedent for later centuries--and we're clearly meant to--then the Federation Starfleet would now exist in parallel to a military organization. Say, the Federation Assault Landing Command Organization (FALCO). We've never seen them (or have we?) but by function and capability they would be the 24th century equivalent of Earth's MACOs.
Amazing how they use the same rank insignia and combadge as Starfleet, isn't it?

You may be comfortable thinking of Starfleet as a space navy, but planets are not coastlines, and space is not an ocean.
That's just how the show was written.

Starships can attack a planet from 360 degrees in every axis, and the only way to keep them at a distance is to establish a spherical perimeter. If that perimeter is ten light years in diameter (large enough to give you 24 hours warning of anything coming into the system) then your fleet is defending a perimeter with an area of 314 cubic light years.
And ships are not needed to form a physical blockade, either. As long as a detection grid can be established, ships would only need to fill an interception role.

That during WARTIME, when you're committing thousands of ships to the defense of your planet. During peacetime, an alien juggernaut comes screaming out of Klingon space and the only thing between it and Earth is a single starship that hasn't had a shakedown yet. If that had been a Klingon fleet instead of an emotionally disturbed space probe, they could have taken Enterprise thirty to one and then proceeded straight to Earth, unopposed by Starfleet.
That's just part of how stupidly the show could be written in order to drum up a false sense of drama. Many reviewers have pointed this out.

So why didn't they? Because even in the ABSENCE of Starfleet, Earth's defenses are impervious to any conventional attack.
The only things we've heard about planetary defenses is usually to hear how inadequate they are. Their existence also does not mean there is a no need for Starfleet to have a defensive role, not to mention that we have clearly seen that Starfleet has a defensive role. Indeed it was Starfleet which destroyed most of the Breen attackers, and there wasn't any other reference to planetary defenses. Betazed was apparently supposed to be defended by a numbered fleet of Starfleet ships, and its planetary defenses were only mentioned to point out how inadequate they were.

As usual, you only care about dialog when it supports your theory... but it's still there, and it's still canon, whether you are comfortable with it or not.
And it doesn't get any less ironic when you say this.

"Centuries" lol. We've only been exploring space for fifty years; doing ANYTHING in space is unprecedented.
But the tradition of exploration isn't, and that's what I'm getting at. You simply ignore it because it does not suit your argument, but in order to be intellectually honest, you can't.

All analogies aside, whether or not Starfleet is a military, it is definitely not a navy.
It certainly acts like one, but technically it can;t be because it isn't waterborne, it's spaceborne, which is probably why it's called Starfleet.

Modern military definitions depend on legal precedent. Where's the Federation law that says Starfleet is their military organization?
Where's the law that says it isn't?

The answer was: "I have never claimed it CANNOT be a military that carries out exploration. I have said that it is NOT a military that carries out scientific research. Primarily because it is not a military.
Exactly, you avoided the question by making a statement for which there is no real basis.

If you don't wish to answer my question, then you don't need to participate in this discussion. There is no point in doing so if all it accomplishes is to upset you.
 
No, just most of them. If defense is that big of a priority it would take precedence over deep space exploration more often than not.

No, not most of them. It's enough for just one ship to be redirected from an exploration/scientific mission to a military mission. Actually, can you name me any ocassion when space exploration was more important than an immediate military threat?

I cannot, on the other hand, think of any better reason why so few Starfleet vessels would be available in the presence of an existential threat like the Borg or V'ger. In the Dominion War we find out they have HUNDREDS of ships in Starfleet... where the hell are they during TNG?
The Federation is HUGE. Thousands of light years. Starfleet has to spread it's ships thinly so it can be ready to protect every part of the Federation. Of course, once it becomes clear there's a huge threat coming from just one direction, they'll amass their ships to fight it. Yeah, some are in deep space but frankly, I think Starfleet keeps at least half of it's ships (and likely much more) inside it's borders or in close proximity at all times.

That depends. How valuable is the nebula and how dangerous are the aliens? Just so we can make this an apples-apples comparison.
I'd say protecting the life of even a single Federation citizen should and would be more important than studying even the most scientifically interesting nebula. At least 99% of the time. The only time I can see it being in reverse is if the nebula for some reason presented an even greater immediate threat to the Federation and it's citizens. But then, studying it would stop being a solely scientific mission and become a military/national security mission as well.

Wouldn't you agree?

Frankly, yes. Though admittedly I may simply be playing way too much Halo-3, I'm of the opinion lately that "interplanetary war" is a rather incoherent and illogical concept, because there is there's nothing BETWEEN planets worth fighting over. Wars are fought over territory, over resources, over strategic locations near enemy installations that may compromise future works over territory and resources. In other words, wars are fought for the control of planets.

Which is precisely why fighting over the space between planets is crucial. What's 'there' is access to planets. Planets are like small islands in the ocean. On a strategic level every land war/battle will only ever be a (rather minor) part of a larger interstellar war fought with ships. It's like the Pacific War. Sure, the land battles are important as well but what wins or loses the war is winning the control of sea/space.

Not to mention the fact that once you have a starship in orbit you have a huge advantage over any purely land troops. True, the planets will probably have some orbital or landbased antiship defences but you won't even attempt a large landing before you neutralize them and gain control of the space around a planet - for which, again, you need starships.

So my conclusion would be that any ground military force will most likely be a part of Starfleet. Or even if it was some sort of a separate organization it would still serve under over-all Starfleet command at practically all times.
 
I would wonder, if not for the fact that I think the Ent-D (and other Galaxy-class ships) carrying scores of civilians and kiddies was one of the stupidest things in all of TNG. Basically I'm with Ron Moore on this one. With each additional time the ship was sent on a military mission, the problem with this concept just became more and more glaring. Seriously, "The Defector", "The Wounded", "The Survivors", to name a few... you do not send a non-military craft on those missions (and you certainly shouldn't be sending a craft jammed full of civs and younglings, regardless).
The thing to remember is that Enterprise was supposed to separate the saucer ANY time it ever went into a combat mission. Which makes sense, in a way, especially since the ship was originally envisioned to be a deep space exploration vessel that rarely gets to a starbase.

The thing you've really gotta be asking yourself is, why were there civilians on the Saratoga?

Real militaries do a lot of exploration, as has been pointed out.
But not at the expense of their PRIMARY mission--national defense--unlike Starfleet, which routinely dispenses with strategic readiness in favor of deep space exploration. Vigilance is a military prerogative, even in peacetime; Starfleet has CLEARLY given that prerogative up to somebody else.

Starfleet does a lot of exploration, but regardless of that, when there is a serious threat, they drop everything else to defend their nation against it.
That was my point about non/para-military groups mobilizing for wars. The paramilitaries and private militias usually have civilian jobs they tend to in peacetime and wait for somebody to call them into action; when needed, they drop whatever they're doing and join the fray.

The MILITARY, however, doesn't wait until it's called. They conduct regular maneuvers, war games, training exercises, they shift their deployments to keep strategically valuable areas covered by a bare minimum (at least) response force. They don't wait until a threat materializes to transition into a defensive posture: when that threat does appear, the the FIRST thing it sees is that country's military, already in a fighting stance.

That is, in fact, the ENTIRE POINT of having a standing military. Because militias and gendarmeries require a certain amount of lead time--several weeks or months at least--before they can mobilize for war, while a standing military is ALREADY at a low-level of readiness and can be brought up to full power in a matter of hours.

So who are the Federation's strategic first responders? It sure as hell isn't Starfleet; they've been consistently out to lunch on virtually EVERY sudden threat to core Federation worlds (and even a few not-so-sudden ones). They don't conduct regular maneuvers, and they rarely perform wargame exercises.

So I don't think defense is Starfleet's primary role, I believe--fairly strongly--that someone else in the Federation has that responsibility, and that Starfleet's defensive mission is in support of the Federation's military.

That's not even related to my original point (which you didn't address: you made a big deal out of many of Starfleet's individual military actions being not technically in defense of the UFP as a whole, and I pointed out that this is also true of the US military). The crew of a Starfleet vessel is not even remotely close to being analogous to the crew of the cruise liner in this example, in ANY way (save for "crew of a ship").
Why not? They have naval ranks, just like Starfleet (except they don't salute superior officers; again, like Starfleet). They can carry lethal weapons when needed, much like Starfleet.

The only difference appears to be that Starfleet ships are considerably better armed. If you eliminate that difference--if you mount a couple of Phalanx mountings on the superstructure and a 57mm gun on the foredeck--then what's left?

My point is this: if you were a 17th century sailor watching, say, the up-gunned Seaborne Spirit fighting off a bunch of Somali pirates, you would probably conclude that it was a military. You would not doubt make this mistake because you are unaware of the existence of the U.S. Navy and you have NO IDEA what the 21st century military actually looks like. In my opinion, given the activities and weapon types we SHOULD be seeing from Starfleet, we don't know what a 23rd/24th century military looks like.

We should be seeing photon grenades, personal/portable forcefields, space/shuttlecraft optimized for close air support. We should be seeing (relatively) portable transporters and transporter scramblers. We should be seeing ground-to-space weaponry or some manner of field artillery. We should be seeing equipment designed to build fortifications (a simple SHOVEL would suffice) and equipment designed to dismantle them. Starfleet has NONE of these things: they go into combat wearing their duty uniforms and fight off the enemy using their sidearms. And the existence of most of the above equipment is established in canon: so who the hell has been using it all this time?

Enterprise went out of its way to show us the MACOs, so they didn't have a problem showing other combatants/potential heroes that weren't main characters.
Except even this occurs in the beginning of ENT's third season and was considered a novelty even by the producers. Interestingly enough, it also directly coincides with the first overt reference to Starfleet NOT being the military.

Yet not once during TOS-VOY did we see any forces identified as NOT Starfleet fighting in defense of Federation interests.
Again, we never saw the MACOs do that either until they came aboard the Enterprise.

The Romulans, Klingons, Cardassians, Dominion, and others all operate large, powerful "space navies." Whether or not those powers also have specialized ground forces, they clearly consider the purely space-centric aspect of combat to be quite important. Are the space-going warfleets of those powers not a part of their larger "military"?
In the case of the Romulans, no. They use the Remans as their ground force and keep them as a completely separate organization from their fleet (in point of fact, in all the times we got to see the interiors of Romulan warbirds we never ONCE saw Reman soldiers among the crew).

The case for the Klingons is a bit different too, since in their warrior ethos they don't seem to have a coherent concept of "military," just "warrior" and "not-warrior." They maintain a command structure answerable to the High Council in the form of the Klingon Defense Force, but it doesn't appear that you actually need to be PART of the defense force in order to fight in the wars. Any numbskull with a batleth and a bird of prey can (and will) join in.

The Space-Nazi Cardassians have their unified military, and they also have the explicitly non-military Obsidian Order who nonetheless manages to acquire a space fleet prior to the Dominion War.

And of course there's the Bajoran Militia, whose space force is second rate at best and appears to be PRIMARILY a ground combat force (virtually the opposite of Starfleet in that respect).

Different strokes for different folks, but I don't think anyone's really copying off each other.

I disagree. There is zero evidence for a wholly separate ground combat organization. So, in order to make it all fit together, one must either assume there WAS such an organization that we just never heard anything about
An assumption which seems warranted, IMO. Much like there's no evidence of the German Panzer divisions in Das Boot, despite the fact that they were a MAJOR component of the German war machine. Or in The Big Red One, the SINGLE reference to the Navy is "Hey guys, you know who fired those shots? The U.S. Navy! LOL!"

In a similar vein, regarding Picard and Riker's "we're not a military" dialog in "Peak Performance": I personally think it's bollocks.
I don't. I think that by the 24th century (possibly even by the 23rd) space combat--for Starfleet, at least--is primarily handled by automation, and the primary difference between victory and defeat is the proper application of pre-programmed tactics and maneuvers at the proper time. You don't need to know anything about marksmanship, naval or military history, the strengths and weaknesses of any ships, the specific quirks of impulse engines arranged in specific ways. The COMPUTER knows all of these things and can take them into account when it calculates a firing solution for your torpedo launchers. The only thing YOU need to know is when you use Attack Pattern Alpha instead of Beta or Delta.

The pattern will come with a set of pre-programmed parameters related to relative motion of the target, weapons ranges, deflection angles, shield strengths and your own ship's maneuvering envelopes: things the helmsman doesn't need to know, and doesn't need to coordinate with the tactical officer, because the COMPUTER can take care of those details. And your ship's phasers virtually never miss: not because Worf is such a good shot, but because Starfleet's computers are among the most advanced in the galaxy and have been capable of out-fighting and out-maneuvering manned space vessels since the 23rd century.
 
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It's ironic that you would say something like this when you yourself have ignored all the other character dialog which identifies Starfleet as a military.
Actually I addressed it directly, since the only overt references are Sisko in "Paradise Lost" and David Marcus. Kirk and O'Brien never referred to Starfleet as a military organization.

Actions do.
No, LAW does, not actions. It is for this very reason that the term "unlawful combatant" exists.

Why should I care if you believe that I obviously know more about the military than the writers of these shows and apparently more than you do.
If you don't care, then why bring it up?

My experience with the military allows me to identify Starfleet as a military based on what I have seen of it
And my experience with the military compels me to disagree. It is something else entirely; paramilitary at best, though I'd stop short of calling it a civilian space program.

So you could say that the military has always played a role in space exploration then, couldn't you? ;)
No, because the military presence in space has never been exploratory in nature.

Except that these missions have always been under military purview.
But not under military DIRECTION, which is the point. NASA can't conduct military missions on its own initiative, but it CAN conduct them when asked to.

And yet your organization only illustrates the need for a spaceborne military force in such an event
ICBMs are not spaceborne. They sit on the ground, in silos, naval vessels and portable launchers until the order comes to fire them.

Manned spacecraft are virtually useless in a planetary defense role; just the need to support a crew in the first place considerably reduces their overall capabilities, so much so that anything OTHER than exploration is always--Repeat ALWAYS--easier to do with robots than it is with manned craft.

That's why Almaz was shut down: an armed military space station doesn't make strategic sense when an unmanned satellite can do the exact same job twice as well. That's why M.O.L. was shut down: a manned observation post in orbit doesn't make strategic sense when the Corona Spy Satellites can do the same job twice as well at one tenth the cost. That's why the X-37B was developed instead of the DynaSoar or the Venture Star: an unmanned spaceplane can stay in orbit for MONTHS, where a manned craft can only support a crew for a couple of days at most.

Or any resources.
And those resources are located where? Planets, asteroids, comets... very SMALL things, that are found within planetary systems. And the only way to get those resources is to CAPTURE those planets/asteroids/comets and deny the enemy physical access to them. Surely you understand from your experience with the military that the only feasible way to do that is to physically stand on top of those resources and repel anyone who attempts to get to them.

That is not going to be Starfleet's role any way you slice it, seeing how they are the STARfleet, not the GROUNDfleet. If another organization exists that is specialized in defensive ground combat, that same organization would also be specialized in OFFENSIVE ground combat, and THAT organization--in addition to its specialization in that role--would qualify it as "the military."

It's unfortunate that nothing was ever seen or even described on screen.
A few things were. The field gun from "The Cage," for one thing. The Photon grenade launcher in "Arena," and the hand-thrown photon grenades seen in Enterprise. Homefront/Paradise Lost makes reference to personal forcefields (which Starfleet inexplicably fails to use during the Dominion War) and there are repeated references to transporter scramblers as a basic defensive weapon. There's Soran's forcefield in "Generations" which is functionally a portable bunker, and there's the remarkably effective TR-116 rifle which, DESPITE its uncanny performance, is never used by Starfleet.

I would guess that all of these are examples of military equipment that Starfleet either obtained or had provided to them by the Federation military for their own use. But they are not REGULARLY used by Starfleet, which leads to the question of why these things exist at all if nobody ever uses them. The answer is, the military uses them, and to full effect, because unlike Starfleet they are the most highly trained in their use.

And ships are not needed to form a physical blockade, either. As long as a detection grid can be established, ships would only need to fill an interception role.
Which would still mean they would have to be physically based in orbit of the planet they're meant to defend, and they would have to be there AHEAD OF TIME. This is somewhat doable during wartime when you know exactly what the enemy's objectives are. During PEACETIME, it's an impossibility, and indications are Starfleet doesn't even bother to try.

But the tradition of exploration isn't, and that's what I'm getting at.
And what I'm getting at is the current lack of military participation in space exploration is UNPRECEDENTED. Exploration of Earth has always had a secondary strategic role, and that--combined with their superior training and equipment--made the military most qualified to perform it.

In space exploration, there is NO strategic advantage to it, and the people most qualified to perform that role are NOT military organizations (all respect to NASA, but it's debatable whether even GOVERNMENT organizations are able to do this effectively). A new tradition is/has been forged in this regard, and it is from THESE traditions that Starfleet draws its origins.

The next item on the wall of "past ships named Enterprise," between CVN-65 and NX-01, is the space shuttle Enterprise. The memory wall on NCC-1701 includes it as well. This tells you NASA's legacy is at least as important to them as any seagoing naval force.

Modern military definitions depend on legal precedent. Where's the Federation law that says Starfleet is their military organization?
Where's the law that says it isn't?
Isn't? ROFL! where's the American law that says WalMart isn't the military?

I repeat: where is the Federation law that defines Starfleet IS the military?

Exactly, you avoided the question by making a statement for which there is no real basis.
I've spent three and a half pages giving you the basis for the statement in exhaustive detail. You're asking me WHY I HAVE A PROBLEM with Starfleet being a military, which I have now answered FOUR times now: I do not.

Next thing you know you'll be accusing me of spitting on Starfleet officers at airports.
 
No, not most of them. It's enough for just one ship to be redirected from an exploration/scientific mission to a military mission. Actually, can you name me any ocassion when space exploration was more important than an immediate military threat?
This. Defense has NEVER been shown to take a back seat to exploration when the two are coming up simultaneously; the opposite has been shown countless times.
The Federation is HUGE. Thousands of light years. Starfleet has to spread it's ships thinly so it can be ready to protect every part of the Federation. Of course, once it becomes clear there's a huge threat coming from just one direction, they'll amass their ships to fight it. Yeah, some are in deep space but frankly, I think Starfleet keeps at least half of it's ships (and likely much more) inside it's borders or in close proximity at all times.
I think this is most of it. I think there is also a bit of retconning going on in DS9. In TOS and TNG, the producers/writers didn't HAVE a clear idea (or if they did, they didn't share it) of exactly how "big" Starfleet really was in entirety. Yet it seemed like we, the audience, were supposed to treat 40 starships as "a lot" in BoBW. Then, suddenly, in DS9, they have these massive, 100+ strong fleets. Still, they DIDN'T have a ton of warning in BoBW, so that number doesn't seem ridiculously small. Plus, 40 Starfleet ships against any single ONE vessel should be a rout; even against a Borg ship, they shouldn't fare THAT badly. But this was a Borg ship enhanced with all of Picard's technical and tactical knowledge.
The thing you've really gotta be asking yourself is, why were there civilians on the Saratoga?
Bad writing. I love DS9 and thought "Emissary" was the best Trek pilot, but that was incredibly stupid. There's no way Jake and Jennifer (let alone enough civs for Sisko to say "Let's get the civilians to the escape pods" to his Bolian buddy after they abandon the bridge) would be on board during this battle.
But not at the expense of their PRIMARY mission--national defense--unlike Starfleet, which routinely dispenses with strategic readiness in favor of deep space exploration. Vigilance is a military prerogative, even in peacetime; Starfleet has CLEARLY given that prerogative up to somebody else.

So who are the Federation's strategic first responders? It sure as hell isn't Starfleet; they've been consistently out to lunch on virtually EVERY sudden threat to core Federation worlds (and even a few not-so-sudden ones). They don't conduct regular maneuvers, and they rarely perform wargame exercises.
Re: maneuvers and exercises, I actually wish we had seen more of this, honestly; since I DO believe they are the military, it would only make sense. That said, in this case, I don't see absence of evidence being evidence of absence. There is nothing to suggest they aren't doing them behind our back, and we DO see evidence of combat drills during DS9, on the Defiant (during - granted - heightened tensions with the Dominion and Klingons, but still no official war). Overall, I'd be lying if I said this couldn't be interpreted as evidence against Starfleet being a military (though I do think it's murky evidence), but it still stacks up against an overwhelming amount for the other side.

Re: the Federation's strategic first responders - it absolutely is Starfleet. Whether they respond as fast or as effectively as real military organizations do today (and if one feels they don't, do you chalk that up to lazy writing, the realities of distances in space, etc)... those are all part of a separate discussion. But there is no question that Starfleet is the UFPs strategic first responder for pretty much all large-scale military matters, because they are the ONLY RESPONDERS. We NEVER EVER EVER see any evidence whatsoever in four series and ten movies that any person, ship, or asset of any sort that is NOT part of Starfleet is tasked with responding to a military threat in a military manner.
So I don't think defense is Starfleet's primary role, I believe--fairly strongly--that someone else in the Federation has that responsibility, and that Starfleet's defensive mission is in support of the Federation's military.
See above.
Why not? They have naval ranks, just like Starfleet (except they don't salute superior officers; again, like Starfleet). They can carry lethal weapons when needed, much like Starfleet.
The lethality of the weapons (compared to other weapons of their time) that can be legally carried on a cruise ship is nowhere NEAR the lethality of the weapons (compared to other weapons of their time) that can be legally carried on Starfleet ships.

But more importantly, you forgot two rather major distinctions. 1) Starfleet officers and ships are empowered by their state to conduct military actions - offensive, defensive, rescue/aid, etc. Cruise ships and their crews are not. 2) They might have ranks, but the training undertaken to obtain a Starfleet (or military) rank is just a TINY bit more intensive.

And you still haven't addressed the question I was raising when I brought up the cruise ship thing in the first place.
We should be seeing... (lots of military stuff; trimmed for space). - Starfleet has NONE of these things: they go into combat wearing their duty uniforms and fight off the enemy using their sidearms. And the existence of most of the above equipment is established in canon: so who the hell has been using it all this time?
Worf in Insurrection, for one.
NO ONE uses this kind of stuff. Romulans, Klingons, Cardassians, Jem'Hadar, etc... uniforms, sidearms, and sometimes blades. And the Federation isn't the only power to have equipment referenced but never seen ("Cardassian mechanized infantry"). So unless NO ONE in the known universe has a military, this is irrelevant. It's just more lazy writing.
Except even this occurs in the beginning of ENT's third season and was considered a novelty even by the producers.
So? It being introduced late and being a novelty doesn't change my point.
Interestingly enough, it also directly coincides with the first overt reference to Starfleet NOT being the military.
Which refers only to Earth Starfleet, and thus has no bearing on the nature of UFP Starfleet.
In the case of the Romulans, no. They use the Remans as their ground force and keep them as a completely separate organization from their fleet (in point of fact, in all the times we got to see the interiors of Romulan warbirds we never ONCE saw Reman soldiers among the crew).
That's because they didn't "use the Remans as their ground force", they used them as shock troops (and cannon fodder) during the Dominion War. I'll have to watch Nemesis again to confirm the exact dialog, but I believe the reference to Remans as ground troops goes no farther than that.

Given their on-screen depiction, I find the notion of the Romulan space-based armed forces not being considered "a military" (or part of one, anyway) as we define it to be frankly laughable.
The case for the Klingons is a bit different too, since in their warrior ethos they don't seem to have a coherent concept of "military," just "warrior" and "not-warrior." They maintain a command structure answerable to the High Council in the form of the Klingon Defense Force, but it doesn't appear that you actually need to be PART of the defense force in order to fight in the wars. Any numbskull with a batleth and a bird of prey can (and will) join in.
On a smaller scale, sure, but in large military actions, when have we seen Klingons not identified (either by dialog or their uniform) as military officers in the thick of it?
The Space-Nazi Cardassians have their unified military, and they also have the explicitly non-military Obsidian Order who nonetheless manages to acquire a space fleet prior to the Dominion War.
The Obsidian Order (illegally) building a space armada doesn't make the larger Cardassian space fleet not a military.
An assumption which seems warranted, IMO. Much like there's no evidence of the German Panzer divisions in Das Boot, despite the fact that they were a MAJOR component of the German war machine. Or in The Big Red One, the SINGLE reference to the Navy is "Hey guys, you know who fired those shots? The U.S. Navy! LOL!"
But in Trek, there IS conclusive evidence that the ground forces ARE Starfleet. As I pointed out in my previous post, the guy who shot himself in the leg in "Nor the Battle to the Strong" identified himself as a (soon to be ex) Starfleet officer, and mentioned training at the Academy. Jake says of the Federation combatants in general "they're Starfleet." Vargas quotes Starfleet regulations in "The Siege of AR-558" regarding how long they've been on the front lines.

In at least the 24th century, the Federation's ground based armed forces are part of Starfleet. There is no question about that.
newtype_alpha said:
I don't. I think that by the 24th century (possibly even by the 23rd) space combat--for Starfleet, at least--is primarily handled by automation, and the primary difference between victory and defeat is the proper application of pre-programmed tactics and maneuvers at the proper time. You don't need to know anything about marksmanship, naval or military history, the strengths and weaknesses of any ships, the specific quirks of impulse engines arranged in specific ways. The COMPUTER knows all of these things and can take them into account when it calculates a firing solution for your torpedo launchers. The only thing YOU need to know is when you use Attack Pattern Alpha instead of Beta or Delta.
Certainly, in Trek (the 24th century in particular), both the sophistication of computers and their direct involvement in ship based combat are at a much higher level than today. Regardless, the statements I bolded are flatly contradicted by the shows. Space combat isn't depicted that way at all, for one. And consider the number of characters that excel due to such skills, the number of references during battle to specific tactics being effective (or ineffective; Sisko criticizing the Venture and the Magellen as being "in too tight" during the big charge in "Sacrifice of Angels", for example), the number of times it is implied or outright shown that a given military engagement is won or lost due to the capabilities of the people involved... There may be some real-world logic to the position that computers should be handling much more than they do in Trek, given their level of advancement, but (perhaps simply for dramatic reasons) this is not how things are in the shows.
 
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The thing you've really gotta be asking yourself is, why were there civilians on the Saratoga?

They were family members of the ship's XO. Maybe they were just visiting, or hitching a ride. A Miranda certainly doesn't seem spacious enough to hold civilians.

But not at the expense of their PRIMARY mission--national defense--unlike Starfleet, which routinely dispenses with strategic readiness in favor of deep space exploration.
When? Their readiness might be inadequate at times but how do you know it's not because of being stretched too thin or bad strategic thinking and not because of diverting ships over to exploration? (Of course, the real reason is lazy writing) By the time of VOY's 'Endgame' they sure seem able to gather a big response force in a matter of hours, minutes even.

The MILITARY, however, doesn't wait until it's called. They conduct regular maneuvers, war games, training exercises, they shift their deployments to keep strategically valuable areas covered by a bare minimum (at least) response force.
And Starfleet does all of that too.

So who are the Federation's strategic first responders? It sure as hell isn't Starfleet; they've been consistently out to lunch on virtually EVERY sudden threat to core Federation worlds (and even a few not-so-sudden ones).
Well, you do realize that the fact that it was still Starfleet that was always first on the scene means those hipothetical other first responders (for which we have no proof) are even more lax than Starfleet?

Starfleet has NONE of these things: they go into combat wearing their duty uniforms and fight off the enemy using their sidearms. And the existence of most of the above equipment is established in canon: so who the hell has been using it all this time?
Of course, that is simply because of out-of-universe budgetary restrictions. In the novels, where no such restrictions apply, they use all sorts of handy equipment. Plus, we've never seen a true land battle. All we've seen were small skirmishes, fought by improvised and under-equiped troops. (Though, now that I think of it, what about those 'hoppers' from Nor the Battle to the Strong?)

An assumption which seems warranted, IMO. Much like there's no evidence of the German Panzer divisions in Das Boot, despite the fact that they were a MAJOR component of the German war machine.
Except you can't compare a planetary war with an interstellar war. Like I tried to show in a previous post, land troops are much, much less important in such a war than a space navy.

No, because the military presence in space has never been exploratory in nature.
Erm, wasn't the first American satellite launched by the military (and it wasn't a spy satellite)? And if I'm not mistaken, lots of NASA's scientific mission were and are launched by the Air Force.

the remarkably effective TR-116 rifle which, DESPITE its uncanny performance, is never used by Starfleet.
I believe it was explicitly stated that that rifle was developed by Starfleet Security but was made obsolete by some new type of phaser. And it worked so good only because someone added a transporter to it.

In space exploration, there is NO strategic advantage to it,
That is simply not true. It may to a degree be true today, because there's still nothing of significant economic/military value out there. But in the future of Trek where you can discover a new mortal enemy or a new place for colonization or new members for your federation, it very much has strategic value.
 
Re: maneuvers and exercises, I actually wish we had seen more of this, honestly; since I DO believe they are the military, it would only make sense.
So do I, to be honest, but their absence has been too consistent for me to assume their existence without some reason to do so.

OTOH:

I don't see absence of evidence being evidence of absence.
If you're going to play that card, then the same applies for the opposite case: an entire space fleet could exist behind our backs and we'd never know it. Absence of evidence, right?

I prefer to look for positive evidence, or at least circumstantial evidence to indicate the existence of SOME unseen factor.

Re: the Federation's strategic first responders - it absolutely is Starfleet. Whether they respond as fast or as effectively as real military organizations do today (and if one feels they don't, do you chalk that up to lazy writing, the realities of distances in space, etc)... those are all part of a separate discussion.
I don't think they are. I think we have to look at the continued existence and expansion of the Federation as evidence that a very responsive and effective defense system must be in place for Federation worlds, at least enough that nobody has to worry about surprise attacks or sudden invasions by enemy troops. We've spent DECADES trying to explain away bad/lazy/inconsistent writing with in-universe explanations... well, the most likely IN UNIVERSE explanation is that a separate organization exists that is specialized for ground combat first and foremost and that this organization is the Federation's primary military and defense establishment. The reason we've never seen them is because the very nature of the organization means they spend very little time in space and even when the do it's always low-orbit/local traffic, where Starfleet spends most of its time in DEEP space and rarely lingers around low-orbit/local traffic zones.

If you think about it, it's sort of like how we never saw or heard of the Bajoran Militia in any trek series other than DS9. TNG makes no reference to them and neither does Voyager or any of the Trek movies. Arguably, this is because the militia hasn't existed for very long, but the soldiers and equipment that BECAME the militia couldn't have just popped up overnight, and obviously existed as a coherent fighting force long before the Cardassians actually pulled out. So we wouldn't expect to see or hear anything about the Federation's military either, except in a TV show about a starbase in orbit of a major Federation world, way out on the border of Klingon space, where ground pounders are a dime a dozen and occasional Klingon raids are not unheard of.

But there is no question that Starfleet is the UFPs strategic first responder for pretty much all large-scale military matters, because they are the ONLY RESPONDERS. We NEVER EVER EVER see any evidence whatsoever in four series and ten movies that any person, ship, or asset of any sort that is NOT part of Starfleet is tasked with responding to a military threat in a military manner.
Didn't YOU just play the Rumsfeld card a minute ago? The absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.:techman:

But more importantly, you forgot two rather major distinctions. 1) Starfleet officers and ships are empowered by their state to conduct military actions
ARE they empowered to do so, or are they simply ASKED to do so in a galaxy that doesn't look that closely at legalisms?

Worf in Insurrection, for one.
NO ONE uses this kind of stuff. Romulans, Klingons, Cardassians, Jem'Hadar, etc... uniforms, sidearms, and sometimes blades.
The difference is most of these races are wearing full body armor as part of their uniform and we wouldn't expect them to change into something MORE constricting. Especially in the case of the Klingons, who are very big on boarding actions even in the middle of a pitched space battle.

OTOH, we have on various occasions seen the Klingons using some type of short range artillery against Federation positions. We know from "Divergence" that they have the technology to erect relatively powerful shields around specific buildings (it may be a stretch to call it portable, but 100 years of development has to count for SOMETHING) and we've seen the Remans possessing small attack craft that seem to be optimized for the ground attack role.

Just saying, these things exist, and they are often part of the regular arsenal on alien ships. The absence of a Starfleet counterpart would be extremely troubling if Starfleet was the ONLY fighting force in the Federation.

And the Federation isn't the only power to have equipment referenced but never seen
Except we know that SOMEONE in the Cardassian military had to have used it at some point, whether we saw it or not. There, again, is a suspicious absence of information regarding STARFLEET ground equipment, despite the fact that it, again, must exist.

IF it exists, then who's using it? Not Starfleet, I think.

Given their on-screen depiction, I find the notion of the Romulan space-based armed forces not being considered "a military" (or part of one, anyway) as we define it to be frankly laughable.
I never suggested anything of the kind. Only that the Romulan FLEET appears to be a wholly separate organization from the Romulan ARMY, which may be composed entirely of Remans. That, by the way, is a virtual certainty given the fact that humans managed to fight an entire war against the Romulan Empire without ever seeing a Romulan in person. The humans evidently figured out that the Remans were not their real enemy, just one of many slave races being sent to do Romulus' dirty work. More than likely, then, Romulus would consider its fleet ONLY to be its military, with the Remans being described by a Romulan word that literally means "Living bullets."

On a smaller scale, sure, but in large military actions, when have we seen Klingons not identified (either by dialog or their uniform) as military officers in the thick of it?
As MILITARY officers? I don't recall if they ever were. I don't actually think the Klingons have a concept of "military" as such; in human terms, it would be like an organization that is exclusively empowered by the state to eat fried chicken.

I mean, considering the incredibly long list of things over which Klingons can legally kill each other, I don't think their culture would have ever gotten around to developing a concept of "One who is legally empowered to fight on behalf of the state." If anything they would have a concept for someone who is BANNED from fighting for the state because he's either too fucking crazy to be trusted with any amount of firepower, or too important to the empire to be risked in battle.

An assumption which seems warranted, IMO. Much like there's no evidence of the German Panzer divisions in Das Boot, despite the fact that they were a MAJOR component of the German war machine. Or in The Big Red One, the SINGLE reference to the Navy is "Hey guys, you know who fired those shots? The U.S. Navy! LOL!"
But in Trek, there IS conclusive evidence that the ground forces ARE Starfleet. As I pointed out in my previous post, the guy who shot himself in the leg in "Nor the Battle to the Strong" identified himself as a (soon to be ex) Starfleet officer, and mentioned training at the Academy. Jake says of the Federation combatants in general "they're Starfleet." Vargas quotes Starfleet regulations in "The Siege of AR-558" regarding how long they've been on the front lines.
The issue in "Nor the Battle" is trying to figure out the deal with the alternate uniforms; if they're simply Starfleet officers there shouldn't be any broader need for it. Doesn't seem to be any sort of protective gear and isn't any less conspicuous than their fatigue uniforms.

I kinda figure the guy who shot himself was a transfer from Starfleet to the ground force, or vice versa. But as I said before, it doesn't make alot of sense for an organization primarily operating in space to have authority over a ground combat organization; the Air Force was once a branch of the army, but that arrangement seems really strange the other way around.

Certainly, in Trek (the 24th century in particular), both the sophistication of computers and their direct involvement in ship based combat are at a much higher level than today. Regardless, the statements I bolded are flatly contradicted by the shows. Space combat isn't depicted that way at all, for one.
Isn't it?

Specific maneuvers are sometimes called out by direction and heading, but FAR more often by referencing the appropriate attack pattern; when they don't have a pattern that fits a particular situation, chances are they use one that they've already customized beforehand.

As for weapons release, you have to wonder what Worf (or for that matter, Tuvok or Kira or whoever else) is actually seeing when they look at a computer screen and report "They're charging weapons!" Are they seeing an energy pattern consistent with what they've been taught indicates a weapons charge (a virtual impossibility considering the wide variety of weapon types in the galaxy) or are they seeing a display on a computer readout with a display to the effect of "Warning: probable weapon system activation."

And consider the number of characters that excel due to such skills, the number of references during battle to specific tactics being effective (or ineffective; Sisko criticizing the Venture and the Magellen as being "in too tight" during the big charge in "Sacrifice of Angels", for example)
You mean the skills of strategic planning and organization? Absolutely, those take quite a bit of training and experience; they are, however, the HIGH LEVEL aspect of combat, where the learning curve is significantly less steep.

There may be some real-world logic to the position that computers should be handling much more than they do in Trek, given their level of advancement, but (perhaps simply for dramatic reasons) this is not how things are in the shows.
On the contrary, the only thing computers do not directly control is the choice of battle tactics being used; they're in charge of everything else from the implementation of those tactics to the timing and logistics of weapons release. We got a good taste of this in "For the Uniform" and the fantastic amount of extra work that was required to run the Defiant without its primary operating system, and this after O'Brian had ALREADY spent some time trying to restore the computer. If 90% of what the ship does in combat is handled automatically, then that's the 90% of stuff that Starfleet officers don't have to be trained to do unless they're really REALLY good at their jobs.

In the end, that means Starfleet can USUALLY make do with that 10% of combat operations that is still under manual control. Or think of it in more concrete terms: you're holding a pistol that is self-loading, self-aiming, self-cleaning, and has a built-in safety mechanism that will prevent the gun from firing unless it's in its owner's hand and unless it's held in the proper shooting grip. You, the owner of the gun, no longer needs to know anything about marksmanship, how to clean it, what kind of ammunition to buy, what kind of powder grain to use, how to clear a jam, how to adjust your sights, how to control your breathing, how to lead a target, you don't really even need to know anything about gun safety. A ten year old could competently fire that gun after reading the owner's manual.

Obviously, you wouldn't send an army of ten year olds into battle with this weapon. However, with a weapon like this in your arsenal, you've VASTLY simplified the training requirements for your military, if not eliminated it entirely, since the only requisites for your new land army is a certain amount of physical agility and the ability to follow orders really REALLY well.

Basically, you've started handing out weapons to the local football clubs. The only thing is I don't think that the football clubs would then classify as military organizations in the presence of another group that DID have the full range of training despite the existence of these ultimately user-friendly weapons.
 
They could be in the regular Starfleet, they could be a separate organization entirely (the 'FALCOs' ), or as I prefer to call them - and yes, I'm well aware there is no overt evidence for an organization of this name, and I don't care, cuz I like the sound of it anyway - the Starfleet Marine Corps.
But I don't think they're Starfleet, though. As I said to Saito, canon references alot of overtly military equipment that Starfleet rarely uses and has NEVER been seen to use in the 24th century (and we even know from "Legacy" that a starship carries photon grenades in its arsenal, just as Voyager carries "spatial charges").

IF they were part of Starfleet they would have a recognizeable presence on Starfleet ships; the contrast, I think, would be staggering, so much so that the two branches of service would have very little in common. It may well be that the failure of the two to integrate into a single organization lead to their permanent separation, which explains why Starfleet's "security officers"--NOT marines--are in charge of their ground combat missions.

Besides, the implication in "Marines" is that of an expeditionary force aboard naval vessels. Starfleet isn't the Navy, and doesn't conduct expeditionary combat missions. Federation Starlift would probably be more accurate.

At the risk of being *extremely* nitpicky, perhaps Starfleet could be construed as not being a military simply because it's a navy?
But it's NOT a navy, because it doesn't operate in the ocean.

As to your overall point, though, I said upthread that the word "Starfleet" is probably not strictly a proper noun but also a descriptive one: there's "naval vessels" and then there's "U.S. Naval vessels." The distinction would be more concrete than that between "Navy" and "military," though, since Starfleet's primary role is that of exploration in the first place and not--as most navies--a secondary role.

The Federation is HUGE. Thousands of light years. Starfleet has to spread it's ships thinly so it can be ready to protect every part of the Federation.
And for a Federation that size even a fleet of thousands of ships would be able to do nothing else. That's the thing about military readiness: you can't wait until there's a threat to pull ships away from non-military duty.

That depends. How valuable is the nebula and how dangerous are the aliens? Just so we can make this an apples-apples comparison.
I'd say protecting the life of even a single Federation citizen should and would be more important than studying even the most scientifically interesting nebula. At least 99% of the time.[/quote]
Hence the question. In terms of military objectives, ANY incursion by an unknown vessel warrants redirection to investigate and challenge that craft for identification and intentions. I don't see Starfleet doing this unless the alien vessel is actually suspected as posting a danger. As long as you're not crossing the border in a Romulan warbird, they'll usually just scan you and forward your position and heading to Federation outposts along your flight path.

If you ARE crossing the border in a warbird, you're probably looking to do some damage. That would warrant a priority shift to be sure.

And if it's a completely unknown vessel, then it's a first contact scenario and potential diplomatic situation. Starfleet's even more interested in strange new life forms than strange new worlds.

Not to mention the fact that once you have a starship in orbit you have a huge advantage over any purely land troops. True, the planets will probably have some orbital or landbased antiship defences but you won't even attempt a large landing before you neutralize them and gain control of the space around a planet - for which, again, you need starships.
You're talking about space superiority. As already mentioned, that's a virtual impossibility; space is too large for anything less than an ARMADA to have a chance of controlling all of it; air superiority alone is difficult to maintain just over a single landmass on Earth. Much has been made of the supposed weapons ranges of starship weapons, but battles are never VISUALLY depicted at ranges of more than a few dozen kilometers, and in many cases plot logic actually precludes the usual "artistic license" excuse. Even if a single ship can only engage targets in a range of, say, 10,000 kilometers--ridiculously optimistic in light of DS9's depictions--then space superiority around an Earth-sized planet would require hundreds of ships just to secure low orbit.

OTOH, ground based defenses like EP-607 render space superiority irrelevant. The forces on the planet can render your fleet useless without having a fleet of their own, and they have the advantage of larger ammunition stores, larger power sources and shield generators much larger than anything your ships can carry. You simply can't carry a weapon large enough to breach their fortifications: they have an entire planet to work with.

So my conclusion would be that any ground military force will most likely be a part of Starfleet. Or even if it was some sort of a separate organization it would still serve under over-all Starfleet command at practically all times.
I don't think so, because Starfleet's jurisdiction is--by definition--in space. Ground operations are a whole other ball game, and putting that organization under the auspices of a space service is a little like putting the Army under the Air Force's command (where only the opposite has ever been the case.)

Well, you do realize that the fact that it was still Starfleet that was always first on the scene means those hipothetical other first responders (for which we have no proof) are even more lax than Starfleet?
No, because the other organization would ALREADY be there before the fighting started, which is my point. Starfleet wouldn't need to maintain a large or permanent presence in areas where a dedicated defense force was already in place.

If you think about it, this explains better than anything else why Starfleet never assigned a permanent task force to Deep Space Nine even after the wormhole was discovered. Sisko had to go and get the Defiant himself, and even the "local" Starfleet ships like the Malinche and whatever the hell the Bradbury was are never attached to DS9 as a home base. The reason for this, I tend to think, is because Deep Space Nine was being operated by Starfleet on behalf of Bajor, who DID possess a very effective military, but had very little or no experience in managing space combat or space vessels and couldn't afford to develop their own starfleet. The Bajoran Militia, therefore, fills a niche that would normally be filled by the Federation military. So when three Cardassian cruisers show up and start blasting away, it doesn't really matter that the Enterprise is still a day away at maximum warp, because it's expected that the Bajoran Militia will prevent them from taking the station or seriously threatening Bajor.

Though, now that I think of it, what about those 'hoppers' from Nor the Battle to the Strong?
Hoppers? Refresh my memory, it's been a while.

Except you can't compare a planetary war with an interstellar war.
Yes you can. In point of fact there's no FUNDAMENTAL difference, except for the possibility of both retreat and reinforcements to/from locations off-planet. Both the nature, size and locations of military objectives remain the same: cities are still cities, valleys are still valleys, and an eight-man fire-team is still gonna be puckering their collective rectums when they try to breach an enemy-occupied building.

The only real difference is that, in a a large interstellar war, this occurs not just on one planet, but DOZENS of them, at different times or even simultaneously. You could compare it to the island-hopping campaigns in the Pacific during World War-II, except that each "island" is a fair-sized planet and the battle to capture each planet involves the resources and manpower equivalent to AT LEAST three world wars.

Technology has changed, of course, which makes this effort easier to sustain. With starships you can MAYBE make the case that advanced weapons can compensate for the hugeness of space (see above) but in ground combat, even with phasers and advanced guided weapons, you've got troops fighting tooth and nail over rough terrain that at least one side is not at all familiar with, through urban terrain in block-by-block, house by house fighting, through mountain passes and dense jungles, caves, rivers, glaciers, etc. And even if you limit the scope of your operations to only capture the resources you need, the sheer size of a planetary body means your troops still have to HOLD that ground and prevent the enemy contingent on the southern continent from sneaking over and re-capturing it.

There's quite a lot of fighting to this, and it can't be done from orbit. In modern warfare, we've learned the (to many, counter-intuitive) lesson that technically it can't even be done from the air.

Like I tried to show in a previous post, land troops are much, much less important in such a war than a space navy.
On the contrary, I've come to think that that MOST of advanced civilizations in the galaxy manage to get by without a so-called "space navy" to compete with any other race. Without colonial or deep space interests, you've got nothing to defend except your homeworld and your own systems; your fortifications can be fixed, and they can be made quite a bit larger than the enemy fleet's offensive capabilities. So people like the Angosians, for example, can rest easily without worrying about getting rolled by the Breen or the Romulan Empire, knowing as they do that their planetary defenses can hold off any major assault, and even if they can't, their armies of super-soldiers make landing operation amazingly perilous.

Erm, wasn't the first American satellite launched by the military
Launched, but not developed or operated.

And if I'm not mistaken, lots of NASA's scientific mission were and are launched by the Air Force.
Again: launched, but not developed or operated. Moreover, the only reason to use military launch vehicles was because until very recently only Air Force ICBMs had the performance needed to put satellite payloads into orbit. As has been the case in the history of human affairs since the first milennia, actually: explorers always go to the people who have the ships and the armor, because nobody except standing militaries can afford to build them.

The advent of NASA changed all that, however, and the Saturn-I rocket set the new precedent. Because strategic nuclear warheads tend to be smaller than commercial or scientific payloads, the performance criteria for NON military launch vehicles is considerably higher, and the criteria for manned vehicles is higher still. That is a state of affairs that has never before existed in human history.

I believe it was explicitly stated that that rifle was developed by Starfleet Security but was made obsolete by some new type of phaser. And it worked so good only because someone added a transporter to it.
I thought it was developed FOR Starfleet security as an anti-Borg weapon? Ah well...

In space exploration, there is NO strategic advantage to it,
That is simply not true. It may to a degree be true today, because there's still nothing of significant economic/military value out there.
Economic value, yes. With even CURRENT technology it would be possible to extract enough platinum from lunar regolith to turn an immediate profit; overall, there's enough of it on the lunar surface to pay off America's national debt five times over.

But other claims to the contrary, the primary purpose of the military is to defend a country from attack by OTHER PEOPLE. The only people in our solar system right now all live on Earth, so all military assets in space are directed at maintaining peace ON EARTH.

Space colonization would slightly change this, and first contact with aliens would also change it a bit. But in the first case, direct weapons exchange between Earth nations and off-world colonies is extremely unlikely because of a lack of direct competition over resources; in the latter case, it's unlikely because of the lack of proximity, and because direct encounters between the two only becomes competitive when both are going after the same resources.

But in the future of Trek where you can discover a new mortal enemy or a new place for colonization or new members for your federation, it very much has strategic value.
While true, you're overlooking the very BASIC fact that Starfleet has never claimed or even hinted that it is doing these things for their STRATEGIC value. Unless I'm just delusional and for forty years we've been watching Star Trek episodes begin with "... its continuing mission, to catalog new resources, to seek out new enemies or new members for our Federation, to boldly colonize where no man has colonized before!"

That's just not what Starfleet is about. You may prefer to think they're lying about not being a military, but I have a SERIOUS problem with the idea that "Explore strange new worlds, seek out new life and new civilizations..." is merely a marketing slogan for a force recon mission. I mean, I could see that for Stargate SG-1 or Battlestar Galactica (or hell, even a Babylon 5 spinoff), but Star Trek? I just don't buy that.
 
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If you're going to play that card, then the same applies for the opposite case: an entire space fleet could exist behind our backs and we'd never know it. Absence of evidence, right?

I prefer to look for positive evidence, or at least circumstantial evidence to indicate the existence of SOME unseen factor.
It has to make SENSE, though. Absence of evidence IS evidence of absence if there isn't even a SHRED of an INKLING that the thing might exist. And there IS evidence (albeit scant) of battle drills and wargame exercises. Whereas there is - quite literally - zero evidence for another, wholly separate combat organization fielded by the Federation. Now, I admit that my "evidence" for more battle drills and wargames going on when we weren't looking is quite thin, hence why I would still say as I did in my last post that the lack of such exercises can constitute a point for "your side" in the overall debate. However, I also still maintain that it is one point up against a mountain of points in opposition.
I don't think they are.
There are multiple instances that make it quite clear that the ground troops ARE Starfleet, compared to no mention of any kind of dedicated Federation army or anything of the sort.
If you think about it, it's sort of like how we never saw or heard of the Bajoran Militia in any trek series other than DS9.
It's not like that at all. The Bajoran Militia is a very small, ragtag organization that basically only formed BECAUSE of the occupation; the Militia was a more organized body formed from the remnants of the resistance. And they don't engage in exploration, or expansion. They are concerned only with Bajor, and with Bajoran interests. Unless the Ent-D visited Bajor itself and interacted with its government, it is unlikely in the extreme that we the viewers would have ever heard anything about the Militia. Whereas throughout the entirety of four television series about the Federation, we never heard a single whisper about this supposedly plausible Federation military that isn't Starfleet, despite tensions with the Klingons for decades in TOS, three major Borg incidents in TNG, an almost-war with the Klingons on DS9, and of course, the Dominion War. The show is ABOUT the Federation; if they HAD a separate army - or ANY non-Starfleet military force, as you suggest - we would have seen or heard SOMETHING.
Didn't YOU just play the Rumsfeld card a minute ago? The absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.:techman:
Covered above.
ARE they empowered to do so, or are they simply ASKED to do so in a galaxy that doesn't look that closely at legalisms?
Empowered. There is no evidence that the galaxy "doesn't look that closely at legalisms." Starfleet answers to the Federation government in general, and the Federation president in particular (who, as per DS9 "Paradise Lost", is Starfleet's Commander-in-Chief). Starfleet captains and admirals are able to threaten rival powers that particular actions will be treated as acts of war. The Federation council sends Starfleet vessels on military missions in response to potential crises with other powers (TNG "The Defector"). Not much room for debate here if you ask me. The only reason to assume that Starfleet wasn't "empowered" in the way we understand it would be if the shows had offered direct evidence of it. They haven't, thus we are left to use what the shows have implied to make a determination. As I have just outlined, the implication is that they are empowered- officially, legally, etc.
The difference is most of these races are wearing full body armor as part of their uniform and we wouldn't expect them to change into something MORE constricting. Especially in the case of the Klingons, who are very big on boarding actions even in the middle of a pitched space battle.
None of those races - Romulan, Klingon, Cardassian, Jem'Hadar - have uniforms that constitute "body armor", since all of them are routinely taken down by bare-fisted humanoids in weaponless hand-to-hand combat.
OTOH, we have on various occasions seen the Klingons using some type of short range artillery against Federation positions. We know from "Divergence" that they have the technology to erect relatively powerful shields around specific buildings (it may be a stretch to call it portable, but 100 years of development has to count for SOMETHING)
So that's ONE instance of ONE other power using a piece of ground-based military tech besides sidearms (in a show that barely makes a lick of sense on a good day and was produced years after the others, with better visual effects technology). Fine. As I pointed out, we saw Worf using something other than a phaser rifle in "Insurrection." So that's Klingons 1, Starfleet 2. Yes, 2: we KNOW that Starfleet utilized some kind of specialized ground vehicle in "Nor the Battle to the Strong", called a "hopper." We never got to SEE one, but we know they exist and were used by Starfleet ground combatants.
and we've seen the Remans possessing small attack craft that seem to be optimized for the ground attack role.
Kinda like how Starfleet has small attack craft that seem to be optimized for hit-and-run tactics? Klingons 1, Romulans 1, Starfleet 3.
Except we know that SOMEONE in the Cardassian military had to have used it at some point, whether we saw it or not. There, again, is a suspicious absence of information regarding STARFLEET ground equipment, despite the fact that it, again, must exist.
Uh... we "know" that, yet we don't "know" that Federation military equipment that was mentioned yet not seen was simply used by Starfleet, and not some never-mentioned-never-acknowledged other military force?
I never suggested anything of the kind. Only that the Romulan FLEET appears to be a wholly separate organization from the Romulan ARMY, which may be composed entirely of Remans.
I didn't say the Romulan space fleet was part of a "Romulan army", I said it was part of a "Romulan military." Dunno if you just misinterpreted, but we seem to agree that the Romulan space fleet is a rather major part of their military, so this is moot.
I mean, considering the incredibly long list of things over which Klingons can legally kill each other, I don't think their culture would have ever gotten around to developing a concept of "One who is legally empowered to fight on behalf of the state." If anything they would have a concept for someone who is BANNED from fighting for the state because he's either too fucking crazy to be trusted with any amount of firepower, or too important to the empire to be risked in battle.
Fair enough. The Klingon Defense Force certainly carries out the role of a military, in terms of what it does for the Empire, but doesn't structure itself like one in some ways.
The issue in "Nor the Battle" is trying to figure out the deal with the alternate uniforms; if they're simply Starfleet officers there shouldn't be any broader need for it. Doesn't seem to be any sort of protective gear and isn't any less conspicuous than their fatigue uniforms.
It may resist phaser/disruptor fire in some way. And watch "Nor..." again. When Jake encounters Burke (the guy who smacks Jake in the face with the rifle, then later dies in front of him), take a close look. The uniform is pretty mangled, and it DOES look like there are two layers to it across the torso. The left arm looks padded in a way that normal Starfleet uniforms aren't, as well.
I kinda figure the guy who shot himself was a transfer from Starfleet to the ground force, or vice versa. But as I said before, it doesn't make alot of sense for an organization primarily operating in space to have authority over a ground combat organization; the Air Force was once a branch of the army, but that arrangement seems really strange the other way around.
Jake refers to foot-shooting-guy's entire squad as Starfleet and Bashir doesn't correct him. And - again - there is also "The Siege of AR-558." Vargas quotes Starfleet regulations, and the troops there wear a mix of the combat uniform (or whatever it actually is) and the standard Starfleet uniform.

The Federation's ground forces are Starfleet. There's no way around it.

As for the computer's role in combat; what you said in this last post is different from what you said in your previous post. Yes, the computer handles a lot, but this just frees the people up so that they don't have to do everything themselves (so you don't need a bunch of people to fire weapons, you just need one or two). What I was arguing against from your last post was the notion that the officers serving aboard ships are not essential to success in combat; they ARE, very much so, in Trek. This is not debatable. Trek has pounded that notion into our heads countless times. The exact balance between what the computer can just do reliably, without human(oid) input, and what it can't, is murky (like so many things in Trek). But every show has at one time or another held up the concept that not all crews are created equal, and that does make a difference.

And what the Defiant's crew was doing in "For the Uniform" was compensating for the complete system failure of their computer, so they had to do everything manually. The fact that they were still able to be effective is a testament to their training, if anything.
Basically, you've started handing out weapons to the local football clubs. The only thing is I don't think that the football clubs would then classify as military organizations in the presence of another group that DID have the full range of training despite the existence of these ultimately user-friendly weapons.
First cruise ships, now football clubs. Comparing Starfleet to these things which by their very nature have nothing at all to do with being a military is not an effective argument.
 
It's not like that at all. The Bajoran Militia is a very small, ragtag organization that basically only formed BECAUSE of the occupation
Small ragtag organization?:wtf: It's the military of an entire planet. In particular, a planet that is just a hair's bredth away from becoming a Federation member, a planet that all by itself has more strategic importance than any other world in either the Federation OR the Dominion.

And they don't engage in exploration, or expansion.
Land armies rarely do these days. OTOH, you have to figure that the Militia was partly responsible for the security of the Bajoran colonies in the Gamma Quadrant before the Dominion attacked them. I hear they fought well for a... "spiritual people.":evil:

Unless the Ent-D visited Bajor itself and interacted with its government, it is unlikely in the extreme that we the viewers would have ever heard anything about the Militia.
And just how often did the Enterprise-D visit the homeworld of a Federation member and directly interact with its government?

if they HAD a separate army - or ANY non-Starfleet military force, as you suggest - we would have seen or heard SOMETHING.
Why? How often has the Enterprise-D been asked to support a ground combat operation during wartime?

In a related question, I ask this as well: Who or what is the Federation Naval Patrol? How come we never heard of THEM during TNG or DS9?

None of those races - Romulan, Klingon, Cardassian, Jem'Hadar - have uniforms that constitute "body armor"
Klingon battle dress was EXPLICITLY referred to as "armor" on three separate occasions. It would probably be a bit more impressive if not for the lack of a helmet, though.

As for the easy takedowns... I dunno what to tell you. Seems to be a sci-fi trope that no matter how much armor you're wearing, you can still be overpowered and beaten to death by a pair of Ewoks. :ouch:

So that's ONE instance of ONE other power using a piece of ground-based military tech besides sidearms (in a show that barely makes a lick of sense on a good day and was produced years after the others, with better visual effects technology).
Actually I was mainly referring to the Klingon mortars in "Nor The Battle To the Strong."

Kinda like how Starfleet has small attack craft that seem to be optimized for hit-and-run tactics?
Mean the Peregrine class support couriers originally used by the Maquis? I'm not sure "optimized" is the word you're looking for.

Uh... we "know" that, yet we don't "know" that Federation military equipment that was mentioned yet not seen was simply used by Starfleet, and not some never-mentioned-never-acknowledged other military force?
The problem is that there are plenty of references to the EXISTENCE of that technology; the personal forcefields in "Paradise Lost," for example. There are no references to Starfleet officers having USED them, though. (Not even in Paradise Lost, which is incredibly weird because they went out of their way to get them in the first place, so how come nobody at Starfleet Headquarters has one?)

It's not like we're talking about entire vehicle types that would only be equipped on specialized starlift vessels. Just personal forcefields... REALLY! Something so mundane that Worf was able to McGuyver a low-quality one with his fucking communicator, and twoyears into the war we still have Starfleet officers going into ground combat without them?

They can't be that expensive or that hard to build. But if they're not part of standard Starfleet mission gear by now, for whom were they invented in the first place?

It may resist phaser/disruptor fire in some way. And watch "Nor..." again. When Jake encounters Burke (the guy who smacks Jake in the face with the rifle, then later dies in front of him), take a close look. The uniform is pretty mangled, and it DOES look like there are two layers to it across the torso. The left arm looks padded in a way that normal Starfleet uniforms aren't, as well.
All I have to go on at the moment is this crappy mp4, but the boot design looks a tad different too.

It's frustrating that the only other time we see this uniform clearly it's right before Vargas gets killed. Maybe this is our explanation why we never see the Federation's land army; their basic training includes advanced ninjitsu, so we don't actually SEE them unless they're injured or dying.:evil:

I kinda figure the guy who shot himself was a transfer from Starfleet to the ground force, or vice versa. But as I said before, it doesn't make alot of sense for an organization primarily operating in space to have authority over a ground combat organization; the Air Force was once a branch of the army, but that arrangement seems really strange the other way around.
Jake refers to foot-shooting-guy's entire squad as Starfleet and Bashir doesn't correct him.[/quote]
I'm not sure that it matters, considering they were discussing the psychological impact of war, not the disposition of Federation strategic assets. Bashir isn't as pedantic as, say, Spock or Data. :vulcan:

And - again - there is also "The Siege of AR-558." Vargas quotes Starfleet regulations, and the troops there wear a mix of the combat uniform (or whatever it actually is) and the standard Starfleet uniform.
For full disclosure I have to point that the first time it occurred to me that a separate ground army had to exist was after watching The Siege of AR-558. Mainly this is because I found myself wondering why Starfleet would have dropped a hundred and fifty people in the middle of Dominion occupied territory and then LEFT THEM there without a starship in orbit. About halfway through the episode (I forget when) I came to the conclusion that most of these guys weren't Starfleet and were an infantry unit assigned to protect a Starfleet engineering team that was trying to hack the communications array.

I'm not as sure now, but watching it again the puzzling mix of uniforms still leaves me wondering.
 
Errand of Mercy

AYELBORNE: We have discussed your offer, Captain. Our opinion is unchanged. We are in no danger. We thank you for your kind offer of assistance, although we must decline it, and we strongly recommend that you leave Organia before you yourselves are endangered.

KIRK: Gentlemen, I must get you to reconsider. We can be of immense help to you. In addition to military aid, we can send you specialists, technicians. We can show you how to feed a thousand people where one was fed before. We can help you build schools, educate the young in the latest technological and scientific skills. Your public facilities are almost non-existent. We can help you remake your world, end disease, hunger, hardship. All we ask in return is that you let us help you. Now.

Later a more advanced alien race offers its own assessment...

AYELBORNE: It is no trick, Commander. We have simply put an end to your war. All your military forces, wherever they are, are now completely paralysed.

....

KIRK: Even if you have some power that we don't understand, you have no right to dictate to our Federation
KOR: Or our Empire!
 
From Obsession

KIRK: Very commendable, Ensign. What was your impression of the battle?
GARROVICK: I don't understand, sir.
KIRK: I'm asking for your military appraisal of the techniques used against the creature.
GARROVICK: Ineffective, Captain. I realise, Captain, you did everything you could do. I know that. It's just that nothing works against a monster that can do the things that thing does.
KIRK: And Ensign, what is your appraisal of your conduct on the planet?
GARROVICK: I delayed firing.
KIRK: If you hadn't delayed firing? No difference, Ensign. No weapon known would have made any difference. Then or eleven years ago. Report for duty, Ensign.
GARROVICK: Yes, Captain. Thank you, sir.
 
Day of the Dove

KIRK: The alien is the real threat. That's the enemy we have to wipe out.
UHURA: Sickbay calling, Doctor. There are more wounded men requiring your attention.
MCCOY: How many more men must die before you two begin to act like military men instead of fools? (leaves)
(The intercom whistles.)
 
From the Enterprise Incident

COMMANDER: You realise that very soon we will learn to penetrate the cloaking device you stole.
SPOCK: Obviously. Military secrets are the most fleeting of all. I hope that you and I exchanged something more permanent.
(They start to step out into the corridor.)
 
@YARN: Please refrain from making multiple posts like that. Those could have and should have been made as one single post.
 
@YARN: Please refrain from making multiple posts like that. Those could have and should have been made as one single post.

I find the presentation less offensive to the eye. The independent posts make it clear that each one offers a distinct bit of evidence.

This forum isn't exactly hoppin' right now, so it does nothing to throw off the flow of the discussion here (indeed, your interjection into this thread is much more of an disruption than these posts).

My posts are not spam. They are not reposts (i.e., saying the same thing twice). The posts are relevant to the topic at hand.

New Type Alpha - has two very long double posts right above my own. I submit that these are more distracting and disruptive than four staccato short-form posts that offer pieces of textual evidence. And yet you have nothing to say to him? Curious that....
 
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