While he certainly made his share of mistakes, he at least won as much as he lost and adapted nicely to failure. While he was never portrayed as unstoppable, he was a serious threat based upon his actions rather than his reputation, which was nonexistent until later in the series. While Jedi were indeed his primary weakness, he was not actually defeated by them, he was defeated by his miscalculated trust in the Norghi. But what was also clever about that was that he was defeated by the one thing he could not determine, that Leia was Vader's daughter and that the Norghi could determine this by smell.The Romulan Republic wrote:I haven't seen much of the show lately, so I won't comment on its portrayal of Thrawn specifically, but I do think Thrawn's prowess has been inflated over time in the minds of some fans. TTT Thrawn made mistakes, or lost battles because of events outside of his control. He underestimated the threat, and overestimated the loyalty, of the Noghiri. He failed to change the codes on those devices he stole from Lando, as I recall, which allowed one of his plans to be sabotaged. He vastly overestimated his ability to control C'baoth. He's good, but he's not infallible.
Edit: He's also got a mixed track record handling Jedi in general. Like I said, he couldn't ultimately contain C'baoth. And he couldn't stop Luke and Mara when they were on his own damn ship, if I'm remembering the trilogy correctly.
Part of the problem is that they made Thrawn an enemy too early in the development of the Rebel Alliance. At this stage, we know that he can't stop the Rebellion or do all that much damage to it, given that they ultimately build up enough to take on the Death Star and even overthrow the Empire. Given what we see in the post-ANH comics, it is also unlikely that Thrawn is alive and loyal to the Empire at that point.
Though the idea about him having a different motivation than the Empire is somewhat interesting.
The problem with that idea is that it means that his grand gambit absolutely has to fail, meaning that he will fail to accomplish anything at all. It is the problem with works of fiction always maximizing the stakes, meaning the bad guys are required to fail.Imperial Overlord wrote:Seems kind of obvious that Thrawn is letting them run so he can keep track of them until they lead him to a big group of rebels and he can swoop down and bag them all at once. It's the only thing that really fits.