There's a very real chance that Dum is still holding under siege. The expedition is expensive but not cripplingly expensive. I'd say that even knowing for sure what's the Karak Dum state is worth the try.My point was not that the expedition will fail at its stated minimum goal of getting to Dun and reporting on what happened. It is that it will succeed thus netting us the needed political capital, but that this goal was not worthwhile from the start. We get the PR and Dwarf favor but Karaz Ankor is still left holding the bill in blood and treasure that it should never have paid.
My point was not that the expedition will fail at its stated minimum goal of getting to Dun and reporting on what happened. It is that it will succeed thus netting us the needed political capital, but that this goal was not worthwhile from the start. We get the PR and Dwarf favor but Karaz Ankor is still left holding the bill in blood and treasure that it should never have paid.
Except if the success is "we went to Dum, lots of people died, and we gained nothing" the expedition has failed. You need a tangible gain beyond 'went somewhere, here's a report' for there to be a success to build political capital off, preferably one that demonstrates your contribution as necessary. For this expedition to actually work for the purposes you're stating, it needs to accomplish more than just surviving the trip to Dum and back, it needs to retrieve something of some level of importance, even if that's just the crown, or a store of runework or something similar. Survival and success aren't the same thing.
And again, if Mathilde's starting point is "this expedition isn't worth it" why did she spend all that money and resources on getting it more stuff? Why get Thorek to help? Why convince more people to come along, some of whom are definitely going to die? Why aid the expedition at all? Why not undermine it so that it loses the least amount possible, and wait for another, better opportunity to push her political agenda? It's not like the Dwarfs are never going to need to help again.
You are ignoring the intangibles. And in a fantasy world, especially where whf dawi are concerned, intangibles matter, a lot.
You are also ignoring the potential gains of lost runic lore and artefacts.
I am hoping that there are dwarf survivors, but even if there aren't, there are still benefits to be acquired.
The only reason the K8P expedition was objectively worth the lives spent was because of the Waystone Network thing that IC we don't even know about yet. And maybe because of finding the We.A sane person capable of doing math? Even Belegar recognizes that with all the skill and all the luck that went into recapturing K8P it was probably not worth the cost in lives. We know different because we read the Thorgrim interlude, but even accounting for that... we are not recapturing Dun so it's off the table.
Mathilde is not a hypocrite if she considers Dwarven lives inherently more valuable than Human ones.If Mathilde doesn't like Borek because he's throwing away lives on this expedition, then she's either a hypocrite, or blind. She's contributed more to this project than anyone else, throwing in hundreds more people, and a bunch more resources. If her starting assumption is that this expedition is pointless, why'd she go?
While technically true, I very much doubt she does.Mathilde is not a hypocrite if she considers Dwarven lives inherently more valuable than Human ones.
Which is why it's not the main point.I'm not so much ignoring them as saying the possibility of such still isn't worth it.
To perhaps bounce off from this from the human looking in on the dawi, the best thing this can do is continue to give the Dawi hope. We saw heard Thorek speaking off the lost hope, we've been in Thorgrim's head and learned about how he's resigned himself and the Karaz Ankor to annihilation and we know from statistical evidence that the Dawi's birth rates are almost directly tied to their confidence in the future.If anything the Karak Dum expedition is a more worthy one because it might save some Dawi lives.
The K8P expedition form the start was for reconquest, Borek's is not. The reconquest of K8Ps had been tried many times and all failed. At least Borek's expedition doesn't have a tradition of failure.K8P was invaded by Skaven and parts of it were held by Greenskins, Karak Dun fell of the map and into warp-tainted hellscape no sane person would want to live in. K8P was on enemy ground, in Dun the ground is (one of them many) enemies.
ATM, I'm glad both at just how cautious and realistic the old olds are being. Of the expedition's membership, half are slayers, the total dawi number about 200 and while the tanks are big and expensive they're still no where near costly enough that the old holds never mind the (I believe 3?) are feeling the strain and won't make up the loss in less than a few years, assuming no tanks make it back.
I would disagree. Waystone Network or not, K8P is in an incredibly strategic position, reclaiming it allows the Karaz Ankor to control all the passes that allow crossing of the World's Edge Mountains into the Dwarven heartland. That's very valuable, as was proven by Karak Eight Peaks successfully annihilating a Waaagh that would have been a major threat to any more westerly polity as it been allowed to continue westward.The only reason the K8P expedition was objectively worth the lives spent was because of the Waystone Network thing that Ic we don't even know about yet. And maybe because of finding the We.
Technically speaking, there were survivors in canon.We don't know whether or not there are still living dwarves in Karak Dun right now. In canon there wasn't, but relying on canon situation is dumb considering we know BoneyM makes alterations at the whim of a die.
And as long as there is a Karak to save, we have forces enough to take it.
250 dwarves, only fifty slayers.Of the expedition's membership, half are slayers, the total dawi number about 200 and while the tanks are big and expensive they're still no where near costly enough that the old holds never mind the (I believe 3?) are feeling the strain and won't make up the loss in less than a few years, assuming no tanks make it back.
And six steam wagons, though one is larger than the others (converted off a different chassis, perhaps?). This is one more than originally forecast.Currently, fifty Engineers, fifty Slayers, and about a hundred and fifty Rangers, mostly of the Redbeards.
Six, only one more than they had two years ago, but in the center of the column is one wider and taller than the others that you presume to be the newest addition.
It's also allowed a long-isolated dwarven hold (Azul) to reconnect to the greater whole of the dwarven empire, after literal millennia of only having contact through very rare messengers.I would disagree. Waystone Network or not, K8P is in an incredibly strategic position, reclaiming it allows the Karaz Ankor to control all the passes that allow crossing of the World's Edge Mountains into the Dwarven heartland. That's very valuable, as was proven by Karak Eight Peaks successfully annihilating a Waaagh that would have been a major threat to any more westerly polity as it been allowed to continue westward.
The Dwarves may not need more space, but a more defensible position to staunch their losses? That they definitely need.
My favored isn't going to win, so tactical voting time.
[x] Lead the Wizards and Asarnil
If, say, the expedition loses fewer Dwarves than expected in every uncircumventable military encounter, circumvents a few military encounters that Dwarves alone would have gotten mixed up in, find Karak Dum ruined, but manages to dislodge whoever has taken residence there for long enough to loot some of the leftover scraps, and then manages to return having lost only a few Rangers, even fewer Engineers and no more than two Steam Wagons, do you think that this would reflect positively or negatively on Mathilde, Imperial aid and radical methods as a whole?Except if her starting point is "the expedition is going to fail to accomplish anything useful and get good people killed along the way" then her helping it out won't further her goals. At best it'll be value neutral, at worst, it'll give the impression that non-traditional aid is why the expedition failed. You cannot start from the perspective of 'this will utterly fail' and still believe you can drag political value out of it. There needs to be some measure of success or this doesn't even advance a cynical goal of making the Dwarfs more open to aid.
What changed and what have you been doing up till now?Edit: Just now figured out the fancy new voting system... Neat!
Individually, and discounting their lives worth to the Empire? She might, because we might. If there was a necessary suicide mission and we'd have to decide between sending a Dawi throng or thrice as large Human mercenary band, all else being equal, who do you think we'd send?
and we know from statistical evidence that the Dawi's birth rates are almost directly tied to their confidence in the future.
I'm not sure that K8P will ever develop the projection power to directly stop a Whaaagh from the Badlands or further East that is actively trying to circumvent them. Even taking Karak Drazh is still little more than a dream and if Birdmuncha had wanted to go West instead of running into our Tower, then he could have.I would disagree. Waystone Network or not, K8P is in an incredibly strategic position, reclaiming it allows the Karaz Ankor to control all the passes that allow crossing of the World's Edge Mountains into the Dwarven heartland. That's very valuable, as was proven by Karak Eight Peaks successfully annihilating a Waaagh that would have been a major threat to any more westerly polity as it been allowed to continue westward.
The Dwarves may not need more space, but a more defensible position to staunch their losses? That they definitely need.
Forgot about that one. Yeah, that's definitely worthwhile. As is giving Thorek more reach and freedom of movement.It's also allowed a long-isolated dwarven hold (Azul) to reconnect to the greater whole of the dwarven empire, after literal millennia of only having contact through very rare messengers.