No doubt they have plentiful video evidence and testimony from tearful survivors available.[X] We should not intervene in the Chrystovian invasion.
Sad thing is, I'm entire able to believe the Chrystovians did exactly what the Cardassians are accusing them of, based off how we've seen them acting when we had a ship down there.
no. as much as i would like to help, they are just too fucking far away, and general war is unacceptable.My personal opinion:
It has been far too long doing nothing to intervene now. Any squadron we send to Chrystovian space will be entirely sacrificial and won't be large enough to deter the full Cardassian force. Even one with added ISC or HoH ships. Among the intervention options, the best is to hover a warfleet on the border and to try to force the Council to declare general war if the Cardassians still go ahead. I feel that bluff will be called, and deterrence is the name of the game we should have been playing because we actually don't want a general war.
Does anyone see the strategic calculus differently? I'm interested in the dissenting opinion, but not really in devil's advocacy.
At that point we're basically building the thing with auxiliary hospital ship capability, more than the ship could possibly use for its own needs, but very helpful at outreach if someone else has a problem.Well, that can't be helped. It does feature the Gorn.
The real ridiculous scenario is designing and semi-seriously discussing building a 1500Kt Cruiser with five separate bleeding-edge 2330s T4 Large Quorsh-Pattern Sickbays, meaning one bay per 100 crew onboard. That's some good medical coverage.
We have gathered extensive evidence of rogue scientists engaging in unethical experiments, on societal scale, using prewarps. They have shaped cultures barely capable of using tools; they have upended the story of an entire planet by providing a species barely out of industrialization the ability to build antimatter; they have overthrown democracies, monarchies, oligarchies, autarkies, and various other forms of government in order to put in their strange experimental regimes. Sometimes, it is to the benefit of the prewarps. Mostly, it is to their extreme detriment.
Indeed, the Chrystovians view the notion of statehood and autonomy with a callous indifference. They do not strive to build something that works. Instead, they often subject unwilling citizens to cruel societal experiments. While some flexibility needs to be allowed in how a society is organized, many of these experiments are obviously foolhardy wastes of resources and sophont happiness. Experiments like giving everyone in a community access to each other's pain-causing neural implants. Or the forest that a Chrystovian 'social scientist' set ablaze, to study how settlements respond to evacuation in the place of fire. And then a follow up on how they respond to flooding. And so on.
The government has been seduced by the promises whispered by the purveyors of these dark experiments, and while they officially ban experimentation on prewarps, they have so far turned a blind eye to a dozen ongoing catastrophes, and the bitter remains of even more abandoned experiments. They act not in the will of the people, but the capricious and sadistic whims of amoral academics.
Indeed. I wondered about that aspect, too. I worked out the Renaissance Hospital Ship, if based on the same frigate frame we're using for the Rennie-A, could have about fifteen large (lower-tech) sickbays, alongside a couple of small science labs for sample testing. So perhaps a third of a hospital ship capacity, but more up-to-date, and you'd think absolutely able to help out significantly with say a colony world outbreak.At that point we're basically building the thing with auxiliary hospital ship capability, more than the ship could possibly use for its own needs, but very helpful at outreach if someone else has a problem.
Tfw you are neville chamberlain and you have to abandon a free people to the depredations of fascists because you're not ready to fight a general war
It's a wrong analogy anyways. Britain could choose to delay and fight later because at a time of it's choosing it could have decided to attack even if it hadn't been further provoked like it eventually was. We can only decide to attack the Cardassians when they do something we must respond to, due to the fact that unlike Britain our policy on offensive wars is "never".Thank you for making me feel really shitty about my decision to cut them lose...
The thing is, if we don't intervene we might be able to use the opportunity to save multiple others. While the Cardassians are... busy... we could get an Allupii Task Force going this year that they'll be powerless to intervene against. We can build the supply lines and waystations to the Allupii now and prevent the Cardassians from being able to pull this off again.
We can double down on the Gorn, get an ittick-ka TF going to stop that war. We can make a difference on multiple other fronts.
I'm also on the side of the grim numbers game, but are you gonna walk the walk here? Because iirc in your proposed deployment plan there is no Allupii TF and Royal gets understaffed. Honestly I'd be willing to draw down on Beyond to get those task forces working overtime...
Wildcard option here, but...
What if we intervened on the side of the Ashalla pact? Its not like they could turn around and say, "um, actually we can handle this" considering they've accused the Chrystovians of things the Federation takes a dim view on, while putting us in a position to subvert Cardassia subsuming the Chrystovians. We get our fleet in place, resolve the issues that caused the declaration of war and then give the Ashalla pact a nice big smile and a "That was a good job. Now that the situation has been resolved. Best we all go home now, don't you think?"
We should also look for a Task Force commander that has a knighthood, or other other feudal honor they can lean on. I don't think's Sam's membership in th eOrder of the Red Paperclip would win much favour as a none random example.As for the Allupii TF, that just jumped up in priority. The good news is now we don't need a TF Breen, so that's six ships freed up right there. I'm going to start moving ships around and see what I can make happen.