Of course the Federation would attempt diplomatic relations. They did that with the Cardasians, and attempted it (repeatedly) with the Borg. Attempting diplomatic relations does not preclude the Captain muting the comms for a minute and asking his science officer to figure out how to take these guys appart if it turns out we have to.Eternal_Freedom wrote:Cesario wrote:Odd strangers come trading away technology infinitely more advanced than your own, and all they want are the maps to your homeworld and those of your neighboring powers. Nope, nothing suspicious there. Not at all. No one would ever feel any desire to build a countermeasure against the possibility that these strangers might not be on the up and up. No sir. It's not like anything like this has ever happened in the Star Trek galaxy before, after all.Batman wrote:Yeah. Some tramp freighter or other showing up that has considerably more advanced technology than the AQ will immediately scare the AQ into going 'WAAH! They're going to invade!!! We have to use all that nifty technology we somehow never used to save our bacon against in-universe threats' because of-what again? It's not like running into societies considerably more technologically advanced than themselves is something that hasn't happened to them before. Guess what-not all of them were bent on conquest. Why in Valen's name would the AQ immediately assume the guys in the YT-2000s trying to get the lay of the land and wanting to trade-especially willing to trade technology far ahead of what they currently have-inevitably must be the scouts for an invasion force?
They wouldn't be buying maps specifically for your homeworld...local star maps are more than just a chart with Earth and a big arrow saying "YOU ARE HERE."
And of course, the Federation, peace-loving society that it is, will instantly jump to the paranoid conclusion that this new power is a MASSIVE THREAT. Surely they would try to make peaceful first contact first, as is their mandate?
And having made First Contact, the Federation learns that the freighters are from a distant group of worlds that are seeking to explore other areas of the galaxy, using their newly-developed hyperdrive. Of course, they'd be willing to share this new drive technology with the Federation, once we get to know you better. Etc, etc.
All it needs is a good cover story and a freighter captain with a modicum of sense.
And really on both avenues the Empire is in serious trouble. Not only is the Federation diplomatic corps good at what it does, making it entirely possible they'll succeed in establishing a peace treaty, but the number of exotic avenues of attack avalible in the Trek universe makes it statistically very unlikely that every single one of them will prove useless. Standardization throughout the Empire which we've seen goes back thousands of years in this relatively stagnant society means that they're less likely to be able to implement a countermeasure quickly to whatever trick does end up working.
Won't do a thing about the numbers advantage, mind you, but the Federation doesn't know about that aspect of the threat just yet.
If you want to keep up that title of Worlds Greatest Detective, it might be useful for you to occasionally read what I actually write.Batman wrote:Happily ignoring that the transport in question is an assault transport of considerable size by AQ terms, mounting a goodly number of weapons, not some tiny civilian cargo hauler,Destructionator XIII wrote:"just a transport" is implying that the lowest warship can crush the Federation's strongest shipthat page wrote: As you can see, the officially published figures are massively in favour of the Empire, even if you disregard the fact that an Acclamator is not a particularly powerful warship by Imperial standards (an Imperial Star Destroyer is roughly 10 times larger (by volume) than an Acclamator and presumably 10 times more powerful, even if we disregard the fact that an Acclamator is just a transport). In fact, the only way to generate a remotely close match between an Imperial ship and a Federation ship is to use a small patrol craft such as Jango Fett's Slave-1:
[...]
Even this seemingly Trek-biased matchup seems to heavily favour the Empire, with Jango Fett's small patrol craft able to hit the Enterprise-D with much heavier firepower than it can dish out in return.Yeah. A heavily modified bounty hunter vessel based on the in-universe equivalent of a coast guard cutter is absolutely the baseline for 'lowliest ship'. I also completely fail to see the part where Mike claim it could defeat an entire AQ fleet, which is what Cesario claimed., and the Slave 1 thing is outright saying that even some civilian's small ship is much better for the Empire.
Here's the thing. The Empire doesn't know how much weaker the Federation's weapons, armor, or power output are before they send their scouting party. That's what the scouting party is going to tell them. If they know ahead of time, they might be able to deliberately cripple some ships, sail in some museum pieces, and try to pretend that this is all they have, but how did they know they'd need to do that to avoid tipping off the galaxy of the enormous advantage they didn't know they had?
Ah yes, I can see why "entire fleets" is exactly the same as "the entire alpha quadrant fleet". How could I have missed that detail. My appologies, Batman. You truly are the Worlds Greatest Detective.Batman wrote:'Isn't it a standard conceit of your side that even the lowliest of Wars vessels could wipe the floor with entire fleets of Trek ships? '
Show me the part where Mike claims that.