Adam Reynolds wrote:Going to Yavin meant that they knew when and where the Death Star would be in order to attack it. While it was a risky plan, it was not entirely an unreasonable one.
Not entirely unreasonable if they
knew for certain that the plans would reveal an exploitable weakness. They didn't. Hell, even Motti and Tagge didn't.
Adam Reynolds wrote:Leaving the Death Star free to threaten planets would cut off whatever support they would otherwise get. There is no way for any world to resist a Death Star, which made destroying it immediately imperative to the survival of the Rebel Alliance. That could be accomplished most efficiently by reversing the Imperial trap. Anything more clever would lead to the Death Star surviving to threaten additional worlds which would bleed the Rebellion dry.
Agreed, but that still doesn't justify Leia's chosen course of action versus all of the other plausible alternatives that would have bought the rebellion precious time. For example, if the Death Star plans showed no external weaknesses, the rebels might have had to resort to an infiltration of the station itself in order to sabotage it from the inside. This is just the sort of option that the extra time would have allowed them to plan for.
Adam Reynolds wrote:Hoth was clearly a prefab base intended to be evacuated. Yavin by contrast was assumed hidden and if found seemed built to fight. It was presumably thus likely even better shielded than Hoth(hence the desire to blow it up with a Death Star). The Rebel Alliance seemed to have learned their lessons with Hoth. Though even at Hoth they only evacuated around the same time the Imperial fleet arrived. Had it been a Death Star arriving instead, they would have never had the chance to evacuate.
Had there actually
been a Death Star at that time, I imagine the rebels would have made far different preparations in place for dealing with an Imperial attack.
Adam Reynolds wrote:It was obviously of paramount significance to Leia, at least, since she refused to give up its location under threat of torture/death, etc. As far as ANH shows us, Yavin IV seemed to be the primary base of operations for the entire Rebel Alliance.
It was worth her sacrificing herself to protect it but it was also worth risking Yavin if it meant the best chance at killing the Death Star before it could do any more damage to the Rebel cause. Risking Yavin was better than risking another Alderaan.
Again, the
uncertainty of the existence of a weakness is what made risking Yavin so dumb. What if it took the rebel analysts
months to pore over the Death Star schematics to find a weakness and only
then discover that it would require the aforementioned infiltration team to exploit? Had Leia played it smart instead of going to straight to Yavin while knowingly being tracked, this scenario would still have allowed the rebels a chance at neutralizing the Death Star eventually.
Meanwhile, there was no indication that Tarkin planned to go on a rampage and start destroying worlds on a whim. He outright stated that the regional governors would rule the worlds of the galaxy through fear of the Death Star and then made his point by actually destroying Alderaan. Unless there were actually worlds who were brave or stupid enough to openly defy the Empire after that, I highly doubt that Tarkin intended to destroy any others.
Adam Reynolds wrote:30 fighters simply cannot have that much value on a galactic scale. The value of bases like Yavin and Hoth is that it keeps the Empire looking for the secret base rather than noticing the development of Rebel allies like the Mon Calamari who have a proper fleet. This is in addition to the smaller spy networks and commando teams that were involved in other actions. Groups like that shown in Rebels never had proper bases that could be attacked in the same sense as Yavin or Hoth.
Conceded. In fact, the new EU shows us that the rebels had a
refueling base on Vrogas Vas that had fighters and soldiers of its own. Of course, this takes place after ANH when Yavin IV had already been evacuated, but the refueling base on the Vrogas Vas was never stated to be THE new rebel base.
Adam Reynolds wrote:Galvatron wrote:I'd venture to guess that the bulk of the Imperial Starfleet (I steadfastly refuse to call it the Imperial Navy) was mostly used to surveil and even blockade suspected rebellious, but heavily defended worlds (e.g. Dac). Satisfied that none of those worlds could launch attacks or supply matériel to the rebellion without confirming the Empire's suspicions or exposing themselves to bombardment, their primary objective would then be to locate and destroy the hidden rebel base because that's where all of their offensives originated from.
This is my head canon explanation for why such a small rebel base was such an important target for the Empire.
I would argue this is true, but from the opposite perspective. The Empire actually fell right into the trap of the Rebel Alliance by attacking overt bases rather than keeping their focus on potentially rebellious worlds like Dac. Because they were still thinking they were fighting the Clone Wars, Imperial officers thought conventional actions could win. They failed to realize that in an insurgency, the loyalty of the people is far more valuable than direct military resources. Thus, in the absence of a Death Star, it was impossible for the Empire to keep worlds in line.
The fatal overconfidence in this scenario was not the Rebels, it was the Empire.
Well, yeah. As Mon Mothma said, by ROTJ the Imperial fleet was scattered throughout the galaxy in a vain effort to engage the rebels, but my belief has always been that the rebels at that time had gone completely nomadic after they had finally acquired giant warships of their own.
Prior to that, all we know for sure is that Vader's fleet was scouring the galaxy with a few star destroyers and thousands of probe droids. The rest of the fleet could have been occupied with defending strategic targets from possible rebel offensives
and keeping the more suspicious systems from doing anything that might help the Alliance.