Darksider wrote:I think the willingness of the Republic and even the Jedi to use the Clones as an army is an important indicator of how far the Republic has fallen as a civilization, of how far it has strayed from it's founding ideals and the past ages where Jedi were truly the protectors of the Peace.
Well, early-on in the the Republic the Jedi could not find a way to prevent the evocii from being fucked over by the Hutts. Arguably that was from the beginning, the Republic was -always- a pretty lose grouping - apparently it was always known as "Republic Authority" showing how toothless it nominally was (in practice it was stronger than that).
Part of the Tragedy aspect of the PT is that Palpatine's plan was only able to succeed because those principles were not followed even by those who were supposed to embody them the most. If the Jedi hadn't taken the easy path and accepted the Clones, and had expanded the Judical forces to fight the Separatists, like Stark said, the armies following them would have been made up of free-thinking men and women, as the Republic's armies had in ages past, Men and women who would've been able to realize that no, the Jedi are not traitors to the Republic and do not deserve to be exterminated.
There were Jedi who used non-clones to build up their army and in general they were saved. Also, I wonder what happened to Jedi who were commanding fleets and were surrounded by non-clone troops (Venators and Victory-class SDs used non-clone crew a lot).
Even though they were looking for another Sith Lord towards the end of the war, they were still too focused on Dooku and the threat he represented to see Palpatine poised to stab them in the back. Yoda has a sort of epiphany to this effect in the ROTS novelization when he's fighting Palpatine. The Jedi grew too stagnant, and became too willing to embrace questionable practices in the name of the greater good, and they paid the ultimate price for it.
Apparently they did not suspect Palpatine because "he already ran the galaxy" or the vast majority of it at least.
Stark wrote:They used an evil weapon forged by evil people on the command of evil people, and in the end it betrayed them.
I thought Sifo-Dyas legitimtely thought he was protecting the Republic.
Darksider wrote:I know it's never happened in any of the EU or the movies, but I can just imagine in my mind a conversation between Yoda or Windu, or one of the more principled Jedi leaders and Palpatine going something like this:
<snip>
Palpatine simply smiles.
It's stated many non-clones were conscripted into the Republic military in general, or joined. Also see the local defense forces and fleets which were federalized.
Darksider wrote:IIRC, they didn't even conscript the various planetary defense fleets into the Republic navy until Palpatine was practically ready to declare the New Order. Palpatine probably brought up issues of factionalism within the Republic (I.E. why should a Kuati soldier die for Alderaan?) and logistics difficulties to enforce the idea that taking the morally correct path would give the Sith-led Separatists, I.E. THE ULTIMATE ENEMY, the advantage they needed to win the war and usher in a new age of darkness. He wanted his Clone Troopers in position to strike the final blow against the Jedi, and he perfectly manipulated the situation so that they were.
The planetary naval forces were federalized after the Rendili incident/attempted secession of Rendili (i.e. before the final 'push' of the Separatists into the Outer Rim Sieges). Even before that though, many worlds gave their militaries towards the Republic and the actions like the destruction of Humbarine strenghtened the impetus for federalization.
Lord Revan wrote:Btw do we really know if order 66 was a secret from the jedi, to me it would reasonble that the wording be something like "if a jedi betrays the republic, a Jedi higher in the chain of command, the senate or the supreme chancellor can order the traitors troops are eliminate him/her eliminate at all costs" with Palpatine using his authority to make it the order apply to all jedi everywhere.
It was a contigency order.
Order 66 could be found in the document entitled Contingency Orders for the Grand Army of the Republic: Order Initiation, Orders 1 through 150, GAR Document CO(CL) 56-95, a document containing a series of special contingency orders that covered any and all emergency situations, which the clones that comprised the GAR were prepared to execute, immediately and without question, and only in specific cases of extreme necessity. Some of these orders concerned contingencies any armed force could conceivably face. Many dealt with contingencies specifically involving the GAR Supreme Commander—in this case, Supreme Chancellor Palpatine—and the effect on the chain of command were he ever to become incapacitated or declared unfit to issue orders. In particular, Order 65 dealt with the detention and possible execution of the Supreme Chancellor by the Republic, further hiding the true intention of Order 66. Sufficiently buried among the other one hundred forty-nine orders so as to almost escape notice, Contingency Order 66 specifically dealt with the effect on the chain of command were issues to arise involving the Jedi.
http://starwars.wikia.com/wiki/Order_66
Gunhead wrote:First obstacle is there doesn't seem to be any legal way for the republic to commandeer men and equipment in order to form any sort of army to fight under the banner of the senate. Assuming they have legal authority to do this or miracle vote one into existence it's a monumental task to organize a force like this and it's made nearly impossible if the governments forced to give up their ships and men are not feeling cooperative. If the governments do go along, you're stuck with a force of wildly varying capabilities and a supply nightmare of galactic proportions.
Didn't the Military Creation Act basically solve that problem?
All this has to be done extremely fast without any real previous framework to base it on and to top it off, you just gave more political ammunition to factions providing the bulk of the men and material to the new army of the senate and this is not what Palpatine would want because it could undermine his political influence in the senate once the real shooting starts.
Palpatine's policies during the Clone Wars were to fellate the racist tendencies of the human dominated Core Worlds, so he -already- pandered to the political factions of the dominant population/powers in the Republic, especially after the Separatists did some anti-human violence/atrocities against human populated core worlds.
The initial wave off assassinations was to damage the Jedi order to a degree it's command structure is fractured and Palpy can just sweep in and declare them all traitors. You can accomplish this by getting rid of relatively few individuals and in the short run the assassination doesn't need to succeed in killing them, it suffices you drive them into hiding and keep them there till you've established yourself and your rule. Then you go out and finish them off.
I suspect you will have somehing straight out of Ancient Rome/China with a few fleets "proclaiming" for the Jedi or the Jedi going warlord and going to Coruscant to fight against the "usurper tyrant of legitimate authority". Remember the Jedi have acted as chancellors to stabilize things before.
Darksider wrote:Another way that regular troops would've made a difference over conditioned clones, is that there is no way to guarantee that 100% of them would go along with the New Order. Someone who signs on to defend freedom and democracy might not necessarily turn into a Stormtrooper for the New Order just because the Senate voted it into being. I think that if they'd had Regular troops instead of brainwashed Clones, the Empire would have been on far shakier ground in it's formative stages. Remember that a significant portion of the non-clone Republic Officer corps went on to defect from the Empire and join the Rebellion. With a fully-regular army, there may have been organized military resistance to Palpatine's assumption of power rather than just a few scattered Separatist holdouts and Jedi-led rebels. On top of providing a method of wiping out the Jedi, the Clones and their conditioning provided a ready-made and completely loyal army to enforce the New Order.
Those same troops would have developed racist and humanocentric tendencies from stories of human worlds being wiped out by biological weapons among other things. Without the Jedi around to mediate the "kill them all" mentality among some soldiers I could see a lot more of the rank and file being loyal to the New Order out of a collective sense of shock and hatred from the war and seeing the New Order as a way to never see that happen again. Also I dont think as many officers defected as you think. In On eof the Wraith Squadron novels it is mentioned there was a certain dance conducted by old repubiic and imperial officers from the core worlds. Because few of those kinds of officers defected to the alliance/new republic, that tradition never took whole in the New Republic military.
darksider wrote:Forming a cohesive army out of all the disparate planetary militias and Navies in a civilization as vast and outright disfunctional as the Republic would be a massive undertaking, wrought with factional politics and logistical nightmares. Just the sort of clusterfuck that would give the CIS a decisive advantage and possibly enable them to win the war.
It was done before, and the difference is that the CIS is not exactly overrunning many worlds during the beginning of the war, they were mainly fighting for independence so were more defensive. They did take over some border worlds though.
Then in their arrogance, the Jedi fell in to the role of generals that the Jedi of old had been, failing to realize that their current peacekeeping philosophy left them unequipped to handle that role.
The Jedi have ALWAYS done that though. And Windo mentions "We're keepers of the peace, not soldiers".
Darksider wrote:Of course the shit he said about "defective" clones disappearing is blatantly contradicted by TCW, where a Clone who came out completely fucked up is given a job as a janitor on Kamino.
The Jedi intervened? Apparently they did to prevent the needless killing of Clones.
Darth Klingon wrote:
There's some evidence that the clones were mindless robots with no free will. Order 66.
Order 66 wasn't just any ordinary military order that a soldier would obey, it was basically "programmed" into the clones, kind of like how you program codes and commands into a computer, which will mindlessly obey them. It seems to me like the Clones had no conscious idea about Order 66, they just obeyed it without even being aware what it was, just like how a computer does the same thing.
Palpatine used certain clones which were more 'loyal' or expected to do that more likely, according to Battlefront II when he sent parts of the 501st to fight alongside Jedi. I guess they were backup to make sure the orders were fulfilled.
Darth Klingon wrote:Another interesting thing is how Palpatine trained them about who to obey in case he died.
The Senate, or a higher ranking Jedi apparently (see order 65 on removal, capture and possible execution of the chancellor)
RogueIce wrote:Probably because they figured that Palpatine, having been (presumably) born on Naboo, was tested for Midichlorians and came up negative?
I don't think midichlorian tests or force-sensitivity tests are exactly common in the Star Wars Galaxy..