Oh no, another wall of text! Oh well, I'm at work and I'm very bored.
VERY differently, which is what I mean by "far." The largest ships in Starfleet are deep space exploration vessels; the largest ships in a military fleet are either combat vessels or command and control craft.
I'm not going to try and put forward anything about real military ship sizes, since I don't know enough about them to comment one way or the other. However, regarding Starfleet, look at the Galaxy. It is a premiere explorer... in peacetime. In wartime, that same class was seen on the front lines of major battles repeatedly, clobbering anything that stood in its way.
Whether it's just that good at both combat and exploration normally, or if it is refit for wartime - with components swapped around, science labs removed for more tactical systems, etc - the fact remains that you cannot just say "the biggest ships are explorers, not battleships."
As for the lack of conquest: I don't see how that's the least bit relevant. That's about a Federation policy, not a Starfleet tactical MO.
Imagine that tomorrow, a new Trek movie were to come out that took place after Nemesis and established that the Romulan Empire had undergone a social and political revolution. They've renounced their sneaky, backstabbing ways; no more conquest, no more subjugating other worlds to their whims or butting heads needlessly with the Federation. Does their military cease to be a military?
I don't recall ever hearing of an instance where the Earth Alliance in Babylon 5 declared war on
anyone except in self-defense or misunderstanding; they never reached out and just said "Hey, weaker species, suck on this" like the Centauri were prone to doing. Yet there is no question that EarthForce is a military.
Starfleet is often shown in support of established settlements (or helping to evacuate them for one reason or another) but rarely in establishing them in the first place
In the early TNG episode "Justice," the Entereprise Dee had just establish (in the first place) a colony in the nearby Strmad Star System.
CRUSHER: "Establishing that colony has been exhausting for the entire crew, Captain.
That's what I had in mind when I wrote it. That is the first and only time we hear of a Federation starship actually
setting up a colony anywhere. It seems to be a fairly rare occurrence.
Aside from that ep and "Silicon Avatar", when did we EVER see a colony being established? We know it happens frequently, but how often are we made aware of any particulars? Unless I am forgetting other instances (and if I am, then fair enough on that point), we have one instance where Starfleet was heavily involved, and one where they weren't (though they were still
there). Which would mean we couldn't draw definitive conclusions either way.
And that entire scene (with their dismissive attitudes, Riker's "minor province" line, etc) is contradicted by the wargame itself, since the crew is not acting at all like it's a waste of time, or that they would SO rather be doing something else, or anything of the sort.
But see, nobody said they have no military role AT ALL, only that their purpose is exploration. I goes back to what I pointed out many pages ago: "The military only engages in combat" is just as overly simplistic as "Only the military engages in combat." Even Picard knows that Starfleet is an armed fleet, but being armed and being a military organization are two different things.
But again, my only point in bringing up the "Peak Performance" contradiction was to point out that there IS a contradiction. I never said it proved that Starfleet was a military, nor did I say that those who agree with Picard's statement claimed that Starfleet has "no military role at all".
I think technobabble really isn't enough to defend the universe. The Federation is going to need armaments and defenses, though I think that planets would mostly rely on wolfpacks of smaller, cheaper ships - death in a thousand cuts as it were. Its possible that Starfleet isn't responsible for planetary defense during wartime, but we know they're there for an offensive.
We know they
are responsible for planetary defense during wartime, though. Even if it would primarily be handled by planetary or orbital defense systems rather than starships, it would be defense systems operated
by Starfleet. Their role in planetary defense is established in "Favor the Bold, "In the Pale Moonlight", and "The Changing Face of Evil."
I think technobabble really isn't enough to defend the universe.
It is in the Trekiverse. Starship captains have derailed entire civilizations with it; Captain Janeway single handedly wiped out the Borg with it. Technobabble can resolve spatial anomalies, it can repel mysterious aliens, it can expose alien conspiracies, it can start wars as well as end them, it can wipe out whole civilizations or save them from the brink of disaster.
Starfleet resorts to [tech] when their weapons aren't effective, and [tech] is ALWAYS effective.
So? That's methodology, not role. They fight with weapons when they have to, they fight with scientific and technical expertise when they have to, and explore the galaxy when nothing else is going on.
Their usual M.O. is likely mostly colonial support and deterring any bad guys from trying to walk up to the Federation and letting loose.
No, their usual M.O. is colonial support and deep space exploration. Deterrence is something they only need to do on established borders in disputed space, and this is (evidently) rarely done with starships.
We don't know exactly what other ships were doing throughout TNG's run, but we DO know that the Ent-D was sent on missions to investigate potential threats from the Cardassians and Romulans, on several occasions. I don't think the number of times we saw this one ship being sent on a military mission would qualify as "rarely". There's also the
Defiant's mission to Tzenkethi space to "show the flag". Now, it turned out to be bogus, but no one batted an eyelash at the idea when they thought the orders were legit.
Like I said earlier, though, if we were just looking at TOS and most of the movies it wouldn't be that big of an issue. The problem is coming from Starfleet's depiction in TNG/VOY and most of DS9; basically, 17 seasons to TOS' three (and then there's the pretty enormous contrast in the "Yesterday's Enterprise" alternate timeline where Starfleet evidently HAS militarized, to the point that the very idea of "Children on the Enterprise" is a complete absurdity). If I had to split Star Trek in half and put the 24th century spinoffs into their own alternate universe, the entire TOS continuum through TUC never depicts Starfleet has anything OTHER than a military organization, in which case the disparity with Earth-Starfleet's nonmilitary background constitutes a paradigm shift as a result of the Earth-Romulan War (I once wrote a fanfic describing exactly this; this thread makes me want to pull my old HD out of public storage). I don't think that can really be reconciled with TNG, though, unless Starfleet waxes and wanes back and forth between its two roles like a giant militia.
I disagree. I think the problem comes very specifically from TNG seasons 1 and 2. That was when the overly peace-loving, "we're not here to fight" stuff was most strongly at play (this is the source of most of the fuel for those who deride TNG's "socialist hippie nonsense" and whatnot). Personally, I have NEVER seen more than a very small disparity between most of TOS, and everything in the 24th century past TNG season 2. I don't see how TMP or TFF or TUC portrays Starfleet as being a military any more than, say, "The Defector" or "Ensign Ro" or "Preemptive Strike" do. And certainly, DS9 was the ONLY Trek incarnation to show Starfleet
fighting a war, so I don't know how you get the idea that it butts heads with TOS' (supposedly) more clear depiction of Starfleet as a military.
IMO, if you drop TNG s1-2, the problem goes away. You are left with a sense that things are more relaxed, more peaceful during TNG than they were in TOS, but not "they were a military before, now they totally aren't; I dunno what happened". The one thing remaining is all the families on the Ent-D, which was a dumb idea that I regard as an (ultimately failed) experiment brought about
by this period of relative peace (alliance with the Klingons, the war with the Cardassians seems to have been mainly a lot of drawn-out border conflicts that never
really threatened the UFP as a whole, etc).
On "Yesterday's Enterprise": they didn't show a "militarized Starfleet." They showed a Starfleet deep into a long war that it was losing, badly. The war ITSELF was the defining change. Having children aboard was an absurdity because of the war. There is no evidence to suggest that anything leading up to that timeline's divergence point from the regular one (which would be the Ent-C NOT being seen fighting for the Klingon outpost) was any different. And I don't see anything about how they were operating that was any different than what we saw in DS9 when war erupted in the "real" timeline (except for those goofy, painfully 80's silver belts and shoulder straps the alternate Ent-D crew had).
I actually think that the Federation is the only power that doesn't have the infrastructure to handle a full-scale war, and is mainly valuable because of the enormous resources it commands as the seat of power of the Federation. In the cosmic food chain, the Federation is a fish that doesn't have need any teeth because nothing else in the ocean is big enough to eat it... at least, until the apocalyptic sea monster that is the Dominion shows up.
Wasn't Starfleet ready to go to war with the Klingons, if it had been necessary? The Organian incident averted that, if memory serves. In "The Defector", the admiral tells Picard that while they don't WANT a war, they "are prepared to take [the Romulans] on if that is what they want." When it became clear that the Dominion threat was about to escalate into a full-scale war, there was little hesitation; Starfleet slid easily into that mode. There was no incredulity on the parts of the officers, no sense of being out of their element. They weren't
happy about it, of course, but they weren't floored by it. They were ready.